Test Drive Unlimited may just be a glimpse into the future of video game
racing. Sure it has the great looking licensed cars and all the graphical
goodness of a next-generation gaming – you can actually look through the rear
window of your car and see your driver changing gears – but then so do plenty of
other next-gen racing games. What really sets Test Drive Unlimited apart from
other games is its scope and the seamless way that it integrates multiplayer
racing into the game.
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| Cruising Oahu. |
First of all the game gives you the entire island of Oahu. You can simply hop
behind the wheel of your car and cruise around the entire island. If you can
drive to it in real-life you can probably drive to it in the game. The sheer
scope of the size of your playground won’t set in until you go for a drive and
then bring up the in game map. Once you get past simply staring at the beauty of
the satellite generated map of the island you’ll probably be surprised to find
that you more than likely haven’t driven nearly as far as you think you have.
Simply going on a drive around the island with no other goal in mind than to see
the sights will require a significant investment of time on your part. For the
first time in a racing game, driving a mile in the game actually feels like
you’ve driven a mile.
The other thing that potentially makes the game a sign of things to come is
its integration of single player and multiplayer gameplay. If you have your Xbox
360 hooked into your network when you start the game, the Test Drive Unlimited
servers will automatically bring in some other gamers from Xbox Live who just
happen to be driving around the same part of the island as you. You can see the
other players in the area both on your map and as you pass their cars on the
streets. You can enter into a multiplayer race by simply flashing your lights to
challenge the other player, or you can drive to places marked on the map as
multiplayer races. It’s really pretty cool to see the innovative way in which
the game completely blurs the line between single and multiplayer gaming, but
it’s not a perfect solution yet. Since you’re never really connecting to a
dedicated multiplayer game per se, it can be difficult to race your friends on
line. Players used to sending game invites over Xbox Live may be frustrated by
their inability to hook up with their friends in the game. There’s also the
chance that the players sharing the road with you aren’t really interested in
multiplayer racing at the moment, which is something that you never have to deal
with when you enter the multiplayer mode in other games.
As for the gameplay itself, it revolves around you entering in the various
races you’ll find around the island or completing missions which pretty much all
amount to nothing more than trying to deliver something somewhere within a given
time limit. The goal of all of this racing is to earn money which can be used to
buy more cars, which in turn will allow you to enter more races. If you’re
looking for a story or structured gameplay you won’t find it here. Test Drive
Unlimited is more of a Zen-like experience in which the journey is more
important than the destination.
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