If the player crashes their car during the race, they can get the car fixed for a fee, or have it scrapped and receive the scrap value. However, if they get involved in a serious crash or the car has already been repaired several times before, they are only able to receive the car's scrap value.
During the road race the player would occasionally also get chased by police. Either instance results in the race being forfeited. If the player can't afford to pay the fine, they will be sent to prison.
If the player doesn't have a car and their amount of money is not enough to buy the cheapest car, the game is over. The challenge is to beat The King in a road race. If you win, you get the King's car and girlfriend, and you become the new King. More details about this game can be found on Wikipedia. Find digital download of this game on GOG or Steam. Available online emulators: 5 different online emulators are available for Street Rod.
These emulators differ not only in the technology they use to emulate old games, but also in support of various game controllers, multiplayer mode, mobile phone touchscreen, emulation speed, absence or presence of embedded ads and in many other parameters. For maximum gaming enjoyment, it's important to choose the right emulator, because on each PC and in different Internet browsers, the individual emulators behave differently. The basic features of each emulator available for this game Street Rod are summarized in the following table: Emulator Technology Multiplayer Fullscreen Touchscreen Speed Archive.
You can copy it freely, but indicate the origin and keep the license. By using this website, you agree with the storing of cookies in your computer unless you disable them in your Internet browser settings. All games Advanced Search. Street Rod - DOS. English Czech. The game's interface is relatively easy and fun to use. You have your own garage as the interface itself.
Options are in the form of the garage's elements such as the clock for the game's main menu and the newspaper as your source for buying cars and parts. Add to that a third person with an attitude that talks to you as you play It's really a neat idea by which up to now, no other racing games have that style.
You feel that you're living a virtual world as opposed to just going from menu to menu. Another realistic part is the ability for you to sell your car and haggle. This game is a true classic. You start out as a petty street racer who wants to be the king of the road.
With a small amount of money you buy a car actually more a piece of junk and start racing. As soon as you start winning some races you will get more money and cars. Keep racing till you have the best car possible and then challenge the King in order to become the number one street racer! There are more then enough racing games around.
The thing that makes this racing game different is the fact you can totally change your car as you wish. Change the engine, carburator, roof, wheels etc. You can even toss a fancy sticker on the side of your car. When racing other racers you can either race for cash, or pink slips. When racing for pink slips you can win the opponents car or loose yours, so watch out who you are challenging! The fact this game doesn't get perfect score is the miss of different race tracks. It's either a drag race or a circuit which won't change btw.
The game compensates with the fun of pimping your ride. Before each race, a pixelated Senna would cheerily offer sage advice about the track you were about to drive, which made it brilliant. Possibly the most realistic game of its era, it actually felt like you were driving a radio-controlled car in three glorious, isometric dimensions. Though the overwhelmingly irritating soundtrack made you want scratch your ears off. Tough, wobbly 4x4 action endorsed by tough, wobbly 4x4 racer Ivan Stewart.
Provided superb multi-player fun, though it was a little Toyotafied - all the trucks were Toyotas, the tracks were plastered with Toyota branding and the pre-race music was a synthed-out version of the "I love what you do for me Toyota" jingle.
Probably the earliest first-person racing game in history, you had to put a plastic car at the bottom of your cathode ray telescreen before tumbling forward between two rows of white dots. It doesn't sound it, but this was genesis. Massively difficult, but became hugely famous in s arcades for being the first cabinet where you could pretend to do wheelies on a full-size replica dirt bike.
Was therefore the last word in cool. You can't have a list like this without mentioning the "in no way affiliated to the show you know and love called Top Gear" game called Top Gear. One of the first racing games on the Super Nintendo, it was mainly notable for a bug that let you hit the finishing post to finish the race, bounce off, and finish the race again, thereby bagging "double points". It was therefore suitably ambitious and rubbish. Basically Nintendo's copy of the superior Out Run, this came with 3D glasses, which gave you a headache and didn't really work properly.
Much like today's 3D tech, really. Another example of how pleased we were by simple innovations back in the early days. It also never seemed to end. Eye-melting F1 game. Inspired equally rubbish cartoon.
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