Shutokou Battle Online was a MMO take on the infamous Shutokou Battle (aka, Tokyo Xtreme Racer) formula. Released on PC only in Japan, this game had a short life from 2003 to 2005.
Sonic Speedway is an LCD game created for distribution at McDonald's restaurants. They were offered as a part of Happy Meals for a limited time in 2003. There are two main buttons on the game which control left and right movement.
Sonic controls a F-1 racecar and must navigate through a race course filled with other drivers. There are three lanes that can be moved about with one lane always left open. The other lanes are occupied by other vehicles. For each row of vehicles avoided a point is added to the score. For every 30 points the level and speed increase with 4 levels total. If the player crashes 5 times in a single level the game ends.
XS Airboat Racing is a racing game that let you test your racing skills through arcade tournament and time trial modes. Play as ten different characters. Three difficulty settings and various power-ups provide hours of gameplay and challenges. Up to nine different tracks that spread to five unique worlds.
This high speed racing game takes gamers on races across 18 cities around the world including London, Paris, Berlin, New York and Los Angeles.
Enhancements like nitro boosts emulate the sensation of speed. Compete in championship mode unlocking new cars and tracks. Race against lifelike A.I opponents in single player mode or challenge friends in the two player and multiplayer modes.
While racing you will have to try to lose the police and watch out for traffic, which you can use to your advantage in causing crazy accidents. Breaking through roadblocks and rules will help you win.
Gameplay is in the style of Midtown Madness.
Mercedes-Benz World Racing (also referred to as World Racing) - is a computer game in the genre of driving simulators, developed by the German company Synetic GmbH. The game was released in September 2003.
Sega GT 2002 is the sequel to Wow Entertainment's Racing Game Sega GT, released in Japan late in 2002 as a competitor to the PlayStation 2's highly successful Gran Turismo 3. The game was originally intended to be released for the Dreamcast, but when the Dreamcast was discontinued in 2001, the game was reprogrammed for the Xbox. Following its initial release as a retail game, it was given away on a disk with Jet Set Radio Future in specially-marked Xbox console packages. Sega released Sega GT Online for the following year, with extra cars and an online facility to be used with the Xbox Live.
Sega GT 2002 introduced plenty of innovative features, many of which were later adopted by future games of its kind.
The game's cover features a Ford GT40 (called a Ford GT in the game), a Ford GT (called a Ford GT Concept in the game), and a Ford GT90.
Need for Speed Underground for the GBA is based upon the same gritty dark-side-of-racing design released on the consoles. Here, players have the opportunity to challenge racers to different styles of driving in order to earn coin that can be spent on upgrades; the GBA game features a garage of fourteen different licensed vehicles from Ford, Toyota, Volkswagen, Nissan, Mazda, Mitsubishi, Subaru and Acura, and each of these cars can be customized with paint, bumpers, decals, rims, ground effects, and more. The further into the Underground you go, the more extras you can unlock in order to create the most tricked out road machine the streets have ever seen. Most of the races are the traditional kind, with players racing against as many as three other opponents in the competition. There are also Drag challenges where racers will have to blast their way down a stretch of road, and Drift challenges where players score points by powersliding around the curves. Every win awards a dollar amount which can be converted into e
Corvette lets you race a variety of Corvettes on the open road or in super speedways. The game includes more than 120 production Corvette models from 1953 to 2003, plus show and race cars. Choose a car, official car color, and a driver, and then race on tracks or an obstacle-filled Route 66. Upgrade your car's engine and suspension for more realistic physics.
In the wacky and cartoonish fast-paced kart racing game, Hugo Bukkazoom!, players control a host of characters from the Hugo world as they zip around the free roaming universe. This simple and easy to play racing game boasts three different and distinct environments, five game play modes, unlockable karts and power ups as well as multiple game play modes.
F-Zero: Falcon Densetsu was compatible with the e-Reader, with some of its content depending of the cards to be unlocked. Later versions of the game had some of the content added as unlockables in other ways, but some of the data, like the stages and staff ghosts, weren't included.
Hugo: Bukkazoom! is a 3D racing game based starring Hugo the TV Troll, a popular cartoon character on Danish television. In this game Hugo is shrunk to the size of little green creatures called greenflies. He must race a kart through marshes, deserts and various landscapes. The circuits have checkpoints, upgrades and a scoring system open to different possible strategies. Both single-player and multiplayer games for up to two players are supported.
Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing (often simply referred to as Big Rigs) is a 2003 third-person racing video game developed by Stellar Stone and published by GameMill Publishing for Microsoft Windows PC systems. The game was released as a largely unfinished product and many parts of it do not work properly at all.
The packaging of Big Rigs states that the main objective of the game is to race a semi-trailer truck (known colloquially as a "big rig") in order to safely deliver illegal cargo being carried by the vehicle, while avoiding the local police force. In actuality, there are no police in the game, no such objectives are presented within the game itself and there is no load attached to the truck.[1] Much of the game instead centers on the player racing their truck against fellow drivers to the finish line; however, in the earlier versions the player's computer-controlled opponent vehicles have no AI and never move from the starting position. In a later version, the computer-controlled opponent will race around th
Shift into something more lethal.
The hunt begins again with SpyHunter 2. The ultimate high-speed combat thrill ride continues with the world's most powerful counterintelligence vehicle, the all-new G-B155 Interceptor. Uncover Nostra's sinister plans for world domination and discover the secrets of a mysterious female agent before it's too late.
Project Gotham Racing 2 is a racing game for the Xbox, developed by Bizarre Creations and published by Microsoft. PGR2 is the sequel to the highly successful Project Gotham Racing. It is the second title in the Project Gotham Racing series