WEC Le Mans
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WEC Le Mans, known as Template:Nihongo foot in Japan, is a racing simulation video game released in arcades by Konami in 1986. It was the first racing video game to depict the 24 Hours of Le Mans World Endurance Championship (WEC). The Lap of Le Mans is split up into three sections, during which the time of day changes from day to dusk, dusk to night, and night to dawn.
Gameplay
The game attempted to realistically simulate car driving, with the car jumping up and down, turning back and forth, and spinning up to 180 degrees, with an emphasis on acceleration, braking, and gear shifting, along with the need for counter-steering to avoid spin-outs. It also featured accurately simulated courses approved by the Automobile Club de l'Ouest, and used force feedback to simulate road vibration in the form of a vibrating steering wheel that reacts to the driver's acceleration and off-road bumps.[1]
The game is known as being very difficult to complete: the track's width remains constant at three lanes of racing, and any slight contact with an opposing race car will result in either a spin, or a spectacular flip in the air. Going off the course and running wide at a corner will also end in a spin.
Play continues until the timer is depleted or four successive laps are completed, which ends the game.
Arcade cabinet
Konami released three different video game arcade cabinet versions of the video arcade game, an upright machine, a 'mini' spin where the driver sat in a sit-down cockpit, and the 'big' spin version, the deluxe arcade version that would actually spin the gamer around a 360° spinning base, turning left or right depending on the corner. The front of the 'big' spin arcade machine looked like a real Prototype C Race car.
The arcade cabinet was expensive for its time, with a high price of £7000 in 1986,[2] equivalent to £Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character "[". or $Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character "[". in Template:Currentyear.
Ports
The game had several ports by Imagine Software (as Imagine Studios) to Amstrad CPC, Commodore 64, MSX, and ZX Spectrum. A rumored 16-bit port to the Amiga and Atari ST was mentioned, but never came to fruition.
Reception
| Reception (ports) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Review scores | |||
| Publication | Scores | ||
| C64 | CPC | ZX | |
| ACE | 841/1000[3] | 832/1000[3] | |
| Computer and Video Games |
82%[4] | 83%[4] | |
| Crash | 66%[5] | ||
| The Games Machine |
14%[6] | 61%[6] | |
| Sinclair User | 91%[7] | ||
| Your Sinclair | 9/10[8] | ||
| Awards | |||
| Entity | Award | ||
| Your Sinclair | Megagame | ||
The game was commercially successful in arcades. In Japan, Game Machine listed WEC Le Mans on their January 15, 1987 issue as being the most-successful upright arcade unit of the month.[9] The spin cabinet went on to be the fourth highest-grossing upright/cockpit arcade game of 1987 in Japan, below Out Run, Super Hang-On and Darius.[10] On the Coinslot dedicated arcade game charts in the United Kingdom, WEC Le Mans was number-three in July 1988, below Street Fighter and Continental Circus.[11]
The arcade version was critically acclaimed upon release. Following its debut at the Preview '87 show[12] in September 1986,[13] Computer and Video Games gave it a positive review in its January 1987 issue, with Clare Edgeley declaring it her favourite game at show, describing it as a "fast and realistic racing simulation" and praising the rotating cockpit cabinet, concluding it to be the most "exhilerating [sic] game" she played in months. She gave it "the edge" over Out Run, mainly for better "movement", but noted "many seem to prefer Out Run".[12] At the ATEI (Amusement Trades Exhibition International) show in January 1987, both Out Run and WEC LE Mans "stole the January show" according to Computer and Video Games.[13] Clare Edgeley reviewed it again in the February 1987 issue of Sinclair User, stating it "is far and way the most sophisticated and certainly the most thrilling game I've ever played", describing it as "like Hang-On" but "with a racing car which you actually sit inside" and a "movement system" that "is entirely different from anything experienced before" where "you really get thrown around" and "which simulates each action, even spinning" and "shakes the whole car" when going off track or skidding on the marked border lines. She stated "there are hazards to avoid, other cars bombing past you", "great graphics and high speed".[2] Top Score newsletter called it a "superb driving simulator that was unfortunately overshadowed" by Out Run.[14]
The Spectrum version of the game also earned critical acclaim.[7][8] The Spectrum version was also commercially successful, reaching 4th place on the UK Spectrum chart in May 1989.[15]
Konami's Tanaka Fumihaki cited WEC Le Mans as the chief inspiration for Konami's 1995 game Speed King.[16]
The Spanish magazine Microhobby valued the game with the following scores:[17] Originality: 30% Graphics: 70% Motion: 80% Sound: 50% Difficulty: 80% Addiction: 80%
Notes
References
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- ↑ Template:Trim WEC Le Mans 24 at the Killer List of VideogamesTemplate:EditAtWikidataTemplate:WikidataCheck
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- ↑ a b http://www.worldofspectrum.org/showmag.cgi?mag=SinclairUser/Issue083/Pages/SinclairUser08300009.jpg Sinclair User WEC Le Mans review, Issue 83, page 9, score 91%
- ↑ a b Your Sinclair, WEC Le Mans review Template:Webarchive, Issue 39, page 55, score 9/10, Megagame award
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
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- ↑ UK Spectrum Sales Chart, May 1989 Template:Webarchive, position #4
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- ↑ (Spanish) Wec Le Mans - ZX Spectrum de Imagine Software (1988) - article on Soloretro
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See also
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- Pages with script errors
- Articles using Infobox video game using locally defined parameters
- Articles using Wikidata infoboxes with locally defined images
- Pages with broken file links
- 1986 video games
- ADK (company) games
- Amstrad CPC games
- Arcade video games
- Banpresto games
- Commodore 64 games
- Imagine Software games
- Konami arcade games
- Konami games
- MSX games
- Racing simulators
- Video games developed in Japan
- Works about 24 Hours of Le Mans
- ZX Spectrum games