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Ridge Racer (video game)

Ridge Racer
Ridge Racer Coverart.png
Developer(s) Namco
Publisher(s) Namco
Distributor(s)
Composer(s) Shinji Hosoe
Series Ridge Racer
Platform(s) Arcade, PlayStation, PlayStation Portable, mobile phone, Zeebo
Release date(s) Arcade
  • JP: 30 October 1993
  • NA: 1 December 1993
  • EU: 26 April 1994
PlayStation
  • JP: 3 December 1994
  • NA: 9 September 1995
  • EU: 29 September 1995
Genre(s) Racing
Mode(s) Single-player
Cabinet Upright and sitdown
Arcade system Namco System 22
CPU 1x Motorola 68020 @ 24.576 MHz,
2x Texas Instruments TMS32025 @ 49.152 MHz
Sound 1x C352 @ 16.384 MHz
Display Horizontal orientation, raster, 640 x 480 resolution, 32768 palette colours
Aggregate score
Aggregator Score
GameRankings 81% (PS1)
Review scores
Publication Score
AllGame 4/5 stars (PS1)
CVG 80% (ARC)
Dragon 2/5 stars (PS1)
Edge 9/10 (PS1)
EGM 17.5/20 (PS1)
18/20 (PS1)
Game Informer 8.75/10 (PS1)
GamePro 5/5 (PS1)
IGN 7.5/10 (PS1)
Maximum 4/5 stars (PS1)
Coming Soon Magazine 4.5/5 stars (PS1)
The Electric Playground 10/10 (PS1)
Next Generation 4/5 stars (PS1)
Award
Publication Award
Electronic Gaming Monthly Best Driving Game (1995)

Ridge Racer (リッジレーサー Rijji Rēsā?) is a 1993 racing video game developed and published by Namco. It was initially released on the Namco System 22 arcade system board, and later ported to the PlayStation console in 1994. It is the first title in the Ridge Racer series released for arcades and home consoles. The objective is to finish in first place in a series of races. The PlayStation version supports Namco's NeGcon controller.

Development took eight months, and the game is based on a trend among Japanese car enthusiasts. The first home version was released in Japan in 1994 as a launch title for the PlayStation; the versions for North America and Europe were released in 1995. It was re-released in Japan for the PlayStation The Best range in 1997, and for the Greatest Hits and Platinum ranges in North America and PAL regions respectively the same year. Ridge Racer played a major role in establishing the new system and giving it an early edge over its nearest competitor, the Sega Saturn, and was considered a rival to Sega's Daytona USA.

Ridge Racer received a highly positive reception. Reviewers praised the graphics, audio, drifting mechanics, and arcade-like gameplay, although some were critical of the lack of strong artificial intelligence and multiplayer mode. The arcade version was followed by a sequel, Ridge Racer 2, in 1994, whereas the PlayStation sequel, Ridge Racer Revolution, was released in 1995 in Japan, and in 1996 in North America and PAL regions. The soundtrack was remixed and released on the Vol. 11 album.


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Wikipedia

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