Big Red Racing
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Big Red Racing | |
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Developer(s) | Big Red Software |
Publisher(s) | Domark |
Platform(s) | DOS |
Genre(s) | Racing |
Mode(s) | Single-player, Multiplayer |
Big Red Racing is a racing game released for DOS in 1996. It was developed by Big Red Software and published by Domark.
Big Red Racing was planned for release on 6 different systems: DOS, PlayStation, Sega Saturn, 3DO, Nintendo 64, and Atari Jaguar, but they were all cancelled except the DOS version.
Overview
Big Red Racing is a comical racing game. During races, the commentators make humorous comments, stereotypically themed to the country they are from. When menu items are clicked, humorous phrases are played.
The later Eurogamer writer Keith Stuart was commissioned to write an expansive backstory for the game, which was to be included in the printed manual. But a few months before release the publisher balked at the cost and cut the manual. Looking back in 2016, Stuart wrote: "They were right. It didn't really add anything, it was indulgent (...) No one will ever care that I spent several weeks writing that nonsense or that now it is gone forever."[1]
Customisation
For the driver, the player can choose from a few different body shapes and change the colour of the clothes. For the vehicle, the player can change the colour and decal.
There are several different drivers for the player to choose from before the race. Two of these are Jake 'Bad' Jackson, and James 'Rabid Dog' Hendy.
Courses
There are 24 courses and 6 cups, encompassing the globe, the moon, Venus, and Mars. Each course has a humorous subtitle, usually a parody of a famous phrase or film.
Mushroom Cup
- United States (Wet & Wild): Water track
- U.S.A. (Excellent Adventure): City track
- Hawaii (Hawaii-5-O): Helicopter track
- Mexico (Margarita Meander): Dirt track
Flower Cup
- Chile (Reservoir Dodge): Ruff track
- Italy (The Italian Job): City track
- France (French Frolics): Quarry track
- Spain (Spanish Inquisition): Rig track
Lightning Cup
- Germany (Sound of Munich): Helicopter track
- England (The Dirt Circle): Dirt track
- Scotland (Highland Fling): Snow track
- Ireland (Lucky Leprechauns): Rig track
Star Cup
- Norway (Fjord Escort): Helicopter track
- Russia (Lenin's Leap): Snow track
- Egypt (The Tomb): Quarry track
- Kenya (The Coffee Ground): Rig track
Special Cup
- Japan (Karma Corners): Dirt track
- China (Under The Bridge): Water track
- India (Hot Water Wander): Water track
- Australia (Road Rage): City track
Rainbow Cup
- Arctic (Frosty's Revenge): Snow track
- Mars (Red Planet Roller Coaster): Planet track
- Venus (The Fly Trap): Planet track
- Moon (Lunar Loops): Planet track
Audio
Music
The theme song for the game is "Let it Roll", written and performed by Hangnail, which plays during the demo and menus. The racing, results and other music was composed by Gerard Gourley. All music, along with each course's intro, is played from the redbook audio portion of the CD-ROM.
Voice overs
In-Game Speech: Lani Minella & Jon St. John
References
- ^ Stuart, Keith (23 April 2016). "Why is video game lore so awful?". Eurogamer.net. Retrieved 1 May 2016.
- 1996 video games
- Cancelled 3DO Interactive Multiplayer games
- Cancelled Atari Jaguar games
- Cancelled Nintendo 64 games
- Cancelled PlayStation (console) games
- Cancelled Sega Saturn games
- Domark Software games
- DOS games
- DOS-only games
- Europe-exclusive video games
- Racing video games
- Racing video games set in the United States
- Sports video games set in Italy
- Venus in fiction
- Video games developed in the United Kingdom
- Video games set in Africa
- Video games set in Australia
- Video games set in the Arctic
- Video games set in England
- Video games set in China
- Video games set in Egypt
- Video games set in Europe
- Video games set in France
- Video games set in Germany
- Video games set in Hawaii
- Video games set in India
- Video games set in Japan
- Video games set in Mexico
- Video games set in Norway
- Video games set in Russia
- Video games set in Scotland
- Video games set in South America
- Video games set on Mars
- Video games set on the Moon
- Multiplayer and single-player video games