Crazy Taxi

Crazy Taxi

  • dreamcase

Editorial Review
If you reflect it’s hard to flag down a cab in a huge city, try driving one in Sega’s zany straight-from-the-arcade port of Crazy Taxi. If you’re one of the teeming fans who keenly played Crazy Taxi in the arcade at a buck a pop, then this game is a must-buy, if only from a purely economic standpoint. Even those who don’t know the difference between Crazy Taxi and the long-running TV series Taxi will immediately recognize the appeal of this game. In fact, this game is so impressive and addictive that it should easily convince a whole new wave of buyers to buy a Sega Dreamcast.

What’s so hot about Crazy Taxi? For starters, the graphics sport the most impressive re-creation of a living city ever seen in a video game. The level of detail is astounding and never ceases to bolt from the blue the player as block after unique block speeds by. The city is a distilled version of San Francisco with some landmarks and neighborhoods left intact. Making it seem all the more real are obvious product placements of real-world retail locations such as KFC, Tower Records, and Pizza Hut. And just about everything you see on the screen is interactive: boxes, phone booths, and mailboxes topple when bumped or smashed, pedestrians leap and tumble out of your path, and the heap of traffic attempts to avoid your erratic high-alacrity antics. While some driving sports meeting brag about a lack of boundaries, this one delivers–players guide on the ocean floor, off the second floor of a parking garage, owing to parks, and down stairs. A helpful hovering arrow points drivers in the right management, but you can truly guide wherever you want at any time, making for tons of replay regard.

While the game is a direct port from the arcade game of the same name, there’s plenty more depth in the home version. In addition to the city that appears in the coin-op version, the Dreamcast version also includes an entirely new city. Crazy Taxi includes a trunk-load of mini-sports meeting that help to teach drivers how to go the special alacrity boosts and drills in the game.

Though this game would be plenty exciting without any sounds at all, it has an adrenaline-pumping soundtrack supplied by punk crossover bands the Offspring and Terrible Religion, as well as some excellent, if sometimes monotonous, dialogue between the driver and the passengers. –Jeff Young

Pros:

  • Wonderful, realistic graphics
  • Simple to get into, and full of many long hours of addictive play
  • Even more to offer than the fantastic arcade game upon which this is based

Cons:

  • On very few occasions players will encounter some graphic brake

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