Reply 40 of 6452, by badmojo
- Rank
- l33t
My play through of Boiling Point came to a messy end when the game world got into such a tangle that I couldn’t continue; not a completely unexpected result unfortunately. It’s a fragile game.
To get my jungle shooting fix I’ve continued with Far Cry 3, which I’ve been playing on-and-off since it was released. I’m yet to finish it but really enjoy it each time I pick it up.
To get my retro fix I’ve been playing Network Q RAC Rally (1996), which is my favourite rally game to date. I have no idea if this is a good racing sim or not, I’m no connoisseur and have no interest in being one. It’s probably a very easy game, the arcade mode in particular is very much a case of ‘point the car forward and go as fast as you can’. There are more challenging modes - a world championship, etc – so I’m sure that a more hardcore rally fan could get something out of this game too, but I play this game for the great graphics, the sound, the amazing weather effects, and the nice variation in location, stage length, and road surface. Some of the longer stages can take ~30 mins to complete, and there’s just something very relaxing about flying along a dirt road through the European country side, a wall of trees on either side barely visible through the falling snow. Snowflakes burst on your windscreen, the windscreen wipers swish, the engine howls and pops, and your co-driver calls the corners. It gives you a real sense of speed which some car games lack.
It’s SVGA only so I’m playing this on a PIII 1Ghz Windows 98 machine to experience it at a decent frame rate, and it’s a DOS game so I’m booting directly to DOS 7. Sound is provided by a SB16, music is red-book and not bad for a mid 90’s game. Back in the day I played this with a Thrustmaster Grand Prix 1 racing wheel. The GP1 has paddles for go / stop, and buttons on the wheel for gear changes. Later models, like the T1 and T2, had a shift leaver and pedals - I’ve tried these models, but personally those additions don’t add much to the experience. The pedals in particular are just extra work for very little gain I think; it’s just more wires and things to go wrong.
To complete the Network Q Rally experience I bought a replacement TM GP1 locally for cheap - I have no idea where the original went. All told the replacement was in very good condition; the paddle gears were stripped, but that was an easy fix. While I was in there fixing things I tightened the “bungie” cord which provides tension when you turn the wheel, and now it’s as good as new. It’s a big improvement over the keyboard; getting the car sideways around corners is the name of the game and a keyboard is just too twitching to do that consistently.
I’m under the impression that this game was not particularly popular, in Australia at least. But if you can find it for sale then I think it’s worth a shot.
Life? Don't talk to me about life.