Tokyo Xtreme Racer Zero
- Thousands of car and part combinations ensures that each vehicle is truly custom.
- Over 100 miles of highly detailed highway.
- Hundreds of new opponents and teams, each with different cars and driving styles, ensures strong competition and extensive gameplay.
- Sticker creator and editor to personalize your team, share/trade them via the internet or VMU.
- Adjustable difficulty settings guarantee everyone will have to utilize all of their skill and racing savvy to attain the coveted title of Emperor of the Streets.
Product Description
No grandstands, no checkered flag, just pure head-to-head competition. When you penetrate the world of street racing it’s not for the trophies, it’s for the rush. Race owing to the streets of Tokyo at up to 200 miles an hour, challenging other racers, each with their unique car and racing stylishness, to winner take all competitions. As you gain victories, customize your car with over 100 parts, new paint jobs and stickers. You will need a finely tuned machine, as well as lightning reflexes and nerAmazon.com Review
Curious about those individuals who guide tricked-out Japanese cars? You know, the lowered Hondas with tires so wide they extend beyond the fenders, the souped-up Toyotas with supersized exhaust pipes, and the custom-painted Nissans with tinted windows and back windshields adorned with adjectives such as “wicked”?
Marvel no more. Tokyo Xtreme Racer Zero delves into the world of highway racing and features customized Japanese autos. The basic premise: cruise the Tokyo highway until you find someone who looks a bit too cocky, flash your lights to indicate your racing intentions, and commence speeding. The racing physics in the game aren’t exact, and the graphics may not bowl you over, but TXR is a lot of fun, and it can be a very deep game for dedicated players.
There are hundreds of prospective opponents and plenty of ways to upgrade your car, but the one element that will no doubt turn off American racing gamers is the fact that there’s only one track for the entire game. If you can handle that, and the lack of any obvious hurt from collisions, then TXR is excellent fun. –Jeff Young
–This text refers to the Sega Dreamcast edition of this game
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take it from me i have this game on dreamcast and it is the bomb it is a total must have if u like xtreme racing and splendid graphics you will toatally like it…imagin this ..your going down the highway doing 200+ mph and u see a fellow racer you get behind him or her and flash your lights then the race is on……..if u like racing sports meeting like me u will get this game allthough i got it on dreamcast i am gonna get it for ps2 its that excellent..if i buy something twice i must like it and i know i luv this game..so what u waitin for get it now!!!!!!!!!!!!..you will like it garenteed
Rating: 5 / 5
If the ps2 version improves on the Dreamcast version then it has to be excellent. Although the Dreamcast version only had one track the splendid graphics and quick framerate made up for it. And being able to place differen’t kits on your car was another plus. Should be nice to play while waiting for gt3.
Rating: 5 / 5
I reccommend this game for people who have it all. For people who are in excellent shape, with a splendid life, and no worries. In other words, people who might *want* to spend their videogame experiences in sheer and utter frustration. Everyone else, stay away. Far away.
For your fifty hard-earned dollars, the game you get is a terribly place-together farce of other (dare I say–excellent?) racing sports meeting. Sports meeting like Gran Turismo 2 or 3. In every aspect it fails to motivate and entertain the player:
The game is a rehashed version (with not anything added, save an even worse interface and a DVD trailer for “The Quick and the Furious”, which is now obsolete since it will be out on DVD for buy here in a few weeks.) of the Dreamcast title Tokyo Extreme Racer 2. Worse than it’s ripped-off bretheren is the lack of VGA support for the PS2, making it hard to discern any detail whilst playing the game.
Game mechanics rate anywhere from ‘moderate’ to ‘poor’ anytime during play, typically causing you to lose a race due not to a lack of skill on your part, but the inability to guide your chosen car in a regular manner. Most of the time it tries to feel like a race-simulation with a (very) slight arcade touch, but believe me, you’ll be fighting your instincts and reflexes constantly, because no car in real life (or any other game, for that matter) behaves as erratically and unpredictably as these. I should know; I race in real life.
The graphics are sub-par for any Playstation 2 title (the colors being mostly monochromatic, and the detail quite hard to make out), and worse than it’s Dreamcast patron. The audio effects are few and far between, and the music score is Extreme-ly repetetive. You’ll probably end up turning on your own music after a very small while.
The actual gameplay is easily the most frustrating experience in the whole of my gaming history (and I grew up from Atari…). You’ll often lose because the opponents’ cars are vastly superior to yours, but only because you can only upgrade your onw car very, very at a snail’s pace in this game. You’ll have all the cash in the world, but be unable to do anything with it. The rivals seem capable of driving in a manner impossible to you, so when/if you defeat some of the tougher opponents, it’s typically a fluke, after having raced the same person eight or nine times prior.
Don’t buy this game. It’s pain and frustration at it’s worst. Instead, buy it for your brother, whom you’ve always loved tormenting. Then, when he won’t play it anymore (this shouldn’t take long), you have a brand-new shiny coaster to protect your coffee table with.
Go buy Gran Turismo 3 instead. Thank me later.
Rating: 1 / 5
I got a PS2 and my mom couldnt find Smackdown 3 so she got me this….it didnt work…but that might have been because it was used
Rating: 1 / 5
I like this game because it has alot of action in it and it’s not violent at all
Rating: 5 / 5