Sega Rally 2
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Sega Rally 2Template:Efn is an arcade racing game developed by Sega for the Model 3 arcade hardware.[1] It is the sequel to 1994's Sega Rally Championship. The game was first released in arcades in February 1998, and was later ported to the Sega Dreamcast, becoming one of the console's earliest titles when it was released in Japan on January 28, 1999. The Sega Dreamcast version was released in Europe as a launch title on October 14, 1999, and then in North America on November 27.[2] A PC version was released in Japan and Europe that same year, with the North American release following suit in November 29, 2000,[3] where it was published by Mattel Interactive.[4]
Gameplay
As with the predecessor, Sega Rally Championship, the object of the game is to successfully drive along a track while reaching checkpoints and thus be rewarded with more time to enable the player to reach the goal. The handling of the car changing with the different road surfaces has also been retained.[5] Sega Rally 2 added new vehicles, new environment settings for the circuits (including snowy tracks and a course set on an island), as well as including multiple circuits in each environment type. An updated version of the original game's Desert track is also included. A hand brake was added to the controls.[5]
The Dreamcast and PC versions of the game also include a "10-year championship" mode.[6] The Dreamcast version, ported using Windows CE, has a frame rate half that of the arcade version.[7]
The Toyota Celica GT-Four ST-205, Lancia Delta HF Integrale and the unlockable Lancia Stratos HF returned from the original game as selectable cars, along with newer Toyota and Lancia cars, as well as cars from Mitsubishi, Subaru, Fiat, Peugeot, Renault, and Ford.
Development
Development on the game began in March 1997, with producer Tetsuya Mizuguchi at the helm.[1] Roughly half of the development personnel were Sega AM Annex staff, with the other half taken from a number of other internal studios at Sega.[8] The majority of the development staff for the original Sega Rally Championship worked on Sega Rally 2.[9] The team created their own development tools for the project.[8]
The cabinet was designed by Sega AM4.[1]
Reception
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The game received favorable reviews on both home platforms. Lamchop of GamePro said of the Dreamcast version in one review, "It looks and feels like the arcade version, and there's no slowdown at all even in two-player split screen mode. SR2 is worth al least a rental for Dreamcast owners who enjoy coin-op racing thrills on the comfort of their own couch."[10]Template:Efn In another GamePro review, The D-Pad Destroyer said, "Rally fans and arcade racers will love this dirt-slidin' good time, but gamers weaned on the post-Gran Turismo racing revolution may wince at the game's archaic checkpoint system. Still, as far as rally racing goes on the Dreamcast, there really is nothing quite as fun as Sega Rally 2."[11]Template:Efn Jeff Lundrigan of NextGen said in its January 2000 issue that the same Dreamcast version "is not the sort of game you beat. Instead, it beats you."[12] A year later, in its January 2001 issue, Jim Preston called the PC version "a fun and pretty arcade rally game that redirects the blood from your brain to your foot."[13] In Japan, Famitsu gave the Dreamcast version a score of 36 out of 40.[14]
Also in Japan, Game Machine listed the arcade version in their April 15, 1998 issue as the most-successful dedicated arcade game of the month.[15]
The Dreamcast version was the best selling Dreamcast game in Japan during 1999, selling 290,000 units.[16] In the UK, it was the 2nd top selling Dreamcast launch game after Sonic Adventure.[17]
Notes
References
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External links
- Sega Rally 2 at Sega Amusements U.S.A. (archived)
- Template:PAGENAMEBASE at the Killer List of VideogamesTemplate:EditAtWikidataTemplate:WikidataCheck
- Template:PAGENAMEBASE at MobyGames
- Demo version at Internet Archive
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- 1998 video games
- Arcade video games
- Dreamcast games
- Empire Interactive games
- Mattel Interactive games
- Multiplayer and single-player video games
- Off-road racing video games
- Rally racing video games
- Sega arcade games
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- Video game sequels
- Video games developed in Japan
- Video games scored by Hideki Naganuma
- Video games scored by Jun Senoue
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