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How you found the violation and any other useful info. Submit Cancel. Open in new tab. Sign me up Stay informed about special deals, the latest products, events, and more from Microsoft Store. Sign up. Destruction Derby 2, it's seven different tracks routes. Wrecking Racing, this is a typical race in which we get extra points for damage to rivals cars.
Stack Car - A typical race where you do not score points for damage to others, but remember that your car can get damaged. Destruction mode Derby is the quintessential game.
Here we go in the arena and the goal is to destroy all cars Destruction Derby 2, it's crazy rallies in a really good graphic setting. Driving simulation is refined - rally enthusiasts will be 'contented'; The advantage of the game is the ability to play through the network.
Gone are the breakup problems, and they've added fire and flips. The cars are more detailed and the tracks look very cool. I love the look of my car as it is flying over jumps and landing with a front-ended smash. The parts of the cars that are constantly flying are now somewhat recognizable. For example, you will see a hood fly by or the lid of someone's trunk lying at the edge of the course.
The fans lining the track are very animated and seem to be cheering you on the whole way through the race. Destruction Derby 2 fixed the problems with the original title and broke what was good in the first. I really enjoy the racing part of the game now, and actually get frustrated trying to race in the destruction derby.
As a racing game, the wrecking race adds a cool twist to the traditional stock car race. The graphics are top notch and I really enjoy the selection of tracks available. This game is a solid title all the way around, if they would just tone the energy level down on the destruction derby. The strange thing is, I keep going back to it and trying to master it so I guess that says something.
It smokes the Dell I've got at work, but to give it that little bit of special "Home PC" flavor and remind myself I'm not actually at work when I'm at home, I needed to install a cool new game to challenge that video card. I was considering installing one of my favorite games from last year, Destruction Derby , when Chad emailed me and said "Hey, we just got the new Destruction Derby and it's for Win Wanna review it? On the negative side, you get even more annoying commentary if you can believe that , an even less intuitive UI, and you'll be lucky if your joystick works Win 95's joystick calibration tool thought mine worked just fine, but DD2 didn't even know it was there.
Oh, and when you collide with someone really hard, you usually go flying up in the air about a hundred feet. I'm no psychiatrist, but I really think this game may be best for overcoming fear of falling.
From the console game "alphabet screen" where you enter your name, to the lack of any control in the "replay" area, the UI is for me what really drags this game down. True, the UI isn't really the game per se, but it shows an overall lack of attention to detail.
Maybe I'm an idiot, but I can't count how many times I looked at the buttons at the bottom of the screen and said to myself, "Okay, I can choose from that blob of stuff or that blob of stuff, but neither of them look like forward to the next menu or backward to the race. Once you get past the menu system, though, the game's not all that horrible.
The races are fairly long, and even if you fall behind at the start you may still catch up by the end, once other cars start doing the fiberglass tango and then stopping for a post-coital smoke alongside the road.
Although winnable, it's not nearly as easy in this version to score points by wiping out your fellow drivers. In fact, I don't really have any idea how I scored all the points I did. In version 1 you could be sure you'd scored when you heard a scream or a "You'll regret that!
Now all you hear is one indistinct yell. And okay, when I just went back to the game to hear the sound again it's Win 95, after all , the game crashed on me when I landed at the bottom of a thousand-foot jump, but the music is still playing. That actually makes this easy on me -- I'm feeling less and less like I need to justify such a low score.
In fact, I'm thinking of lowering it. Better move on. Yeah, sure it supports multiplayer. Just like the manual says: "You and up to nine friends can race individually against the rest of the Destruction Derby crew. Gee, we sure have come a long way since pinball!
If you like wackiness in your auto racing or you think flying through the air and landing on the side of a cliff is cooler than driving, you'd probably like this game. Evel Knievel would really dig it. I don't think "wackiness" was the intended effect, but do you remember that racing game from about 5 years ago where you tried to kill everyone and you bought missiles and stuff for your car and you went miles an hour and when you hit a bump you flew about 5 miles?
Deathmatch ? It reminds me of that. The graphics are x, which isn't great—but if you try real hard you can pretend those big chunks of color on the canyon walls are actually just 8" x 8" rocks. I imagine if it were x by default, a lot of people would be very upset, but if Duke Nukem , Quake and others can offer a choice of screen resolutions, why can't Destruction Derby 2? In fact, the graphics were at times too fast. In Red Pike Arena, the actual "Destruction Derby" site, things move so quickly that you can't really see other cars to hit them.
If you try to turn around to ram them with your rear bumper, the "camera" doesn't turn nearly fast enough so you never really know where you're going. Yes, the commentator is even more annoying than the Robin Leach-esque character from DD1.
Watch the paint work! The major bonus with this game is that every time it crashes under Win 95, the music continues so you can go on with other tasks to the pounding beat of thrill-a-minute industrial bass lines. Installation is clean and uses Win 95's UninstallShield, so uninstall executed permanently just a few seconds ago was clean, too. Setup worked, but had the same kind of unintuitive menu system as the rest of the game. Your best bet is to find Destruction Derby 1 bundled free with one of the new 3D video cards.
I saw one just the other day. All you need to do is uncompress the ZIP or 7z file into your Games folder e. Of course it later made its way onto other platforms including Android devices. Despite what the name may lead you to believe, there is more to Destruction Derby than destruction alone. The Destruction Derby mode kind of speaks for itself.
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