Formula One Championship Edition
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Formula One Championship Edition | |
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Developer(s) | SCE Studio Liverpool |
Publisher(s) | Sony Computer Entertainment |
Platform(s) | PlayStation 3 |
Release |
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Genre(s) | Sim racing |
Mode(s) | Single-player, Online Multiplayer |
Formula One Championship Edition is a racing video game, developed by SCE Studio Liverpool and published by Sony Computer Entertainment for the PlayStation 3. The game follows the basic structure of Formula One 06 for the PlayStation 2 and PlayStation Portable. The main differences include the updated visuals for the PS3 including a lot more detail, Sixaxis compatibility, real time reflections, car reflections on wet circuits and new wet weather effects. It was announced early in development that the safety car would be included in the game for the first time in an F1 game since Formula One 99 for the PlayStation. However, it was removed before the final release along with the PSP wing mirror integration shown at E3.
The game also boasts dynamic weather, and improved AI. The AI system is called "Live Action Racing" where one can pressure the opposition, causing them to make little mistakes such as running wide on corners, causing them to crash into other cars or spin off the road of their own accord. The AI will then try to seek opportunities to pass the player in a realistic manner.
The game is based on the early 2006 F1 season. Hence, Yuji Ide drives for Super Aguri when in reality he lost his super licence just 4 races into the '06 season, and Franck Montagny, then later Sakon Yamamoto took his seat. Other minor changes throughout the real 2006 season are also not represented.
In the career mode, players begin by running tests for one of three teams (Toro Rosso, Super Aguri or Midland F1) at either the Silverstone, Magny Cours or Catalunya circuits. The tests given vary between the teams. When the player successfully completes the tests, they are given the role of test driver or race driver, depending on how well the player performed in the test. After performing well as a test driver, the player will become the second driver of the team. From there the player can compete in race weekends through many different roles. As a test driver the player will try out different car settings in practice, and as a driver the player will have track position targets to meet to keep the seat. The player's performances are subject to review at several points during the season.
The initial release did not include force-feedback support, which is considered by many to be an important feature for simulation racing games used with driving wheel controllers. A subsequent update in early 2008 added force feedback. The game also lacks support for 1080i or 1080p output resolutions. Per the calendar, the Belgian Grand Prix is not included.
The game's cover in the North America version (as seen on the right) features Fernando Alonso (the defending world champion at that time in 2006) who drove for the Renault team, Jenson Button who drove for the Honda team and David Coulthard who drove for the Red Bull Racing team.
Like previous games, it featured in-game commentary from then ITV F1 commentators Martin Brundle and James Allen.
Gameplay
Formula One Championship Edition follows the 2006 Formula One season, with 18 tracks, 11 teams and 22 drivers. Driver changes that happened during the real 2006 season are also not included, such as Juan Pablo Montoya leaving McLaren after the United States Grand Prix and replaced by Pedro de la Rosa and Jacques Villeneuve leaving BMW Sauber after the German Grand Prix and replaced by Robert Kubica.
Release
Formula One Championship Edition was released in North America on February 27, 2007. It was the first Formula One game to be released there since 2003, when Atari released Grand Prix Challenge exclusively for PlayStation 2 and EA Sports released F1 Challenge '99-'02 for the PC, and F1 Career Challenge for the PlayStation 2, Xbox and Nintendo GameCube. It was a launch title for the European and Australasian release of the PlayStation 3.
Formula One Championship Edition was the final release in Sony's series of F1 games which had been running for over a decade, with the announcement that Codemasters had secured exclusive rights to the sport following shortly after the game's release. As this game was effectively an update of the PlayStation 2 game Formula One 06, there was to be no 2007 version of the game - the first time the series had skipped a season since 1996.
This was the most recent F1 game given the three season gap before Sumo Digital's F1 2009 (published by Codemasters) game came out on PSP and Nintendo Wii. In September 2010, Codemasters released F1 2010 with all the official teams and tracks, available on PS3, Xbox 360 and PC.
Reception
Reviews
- IGN - 7.2 out of 10
- GameSpot - 7.2 out of 10
- Gamespy - 4 out of 5
- GameTrailers - 7.3 out of 10
- Edge - 4 out of 10
- Play - 72%[1]
Compilation of reviews
- GameRankings - 76% (based on 19 reviews)
- Metacritic - 74 out of 100 (based on 55 reviews)
References
- ^ Play magazine review, issue 151, Imagine Publishing
External links
- Formula One Championship Edition American official website
- Formula One Championship Edition European official website
- Formula One video games
- 2006 video games
- PlayStation 3-only games
- Racing simulators
- PlayStation 3 games
- Sports video games set in the United States
- Video games developed in the United Kingdom
- Video games set in Bahrain
- Video games set in Brazil
- Video games set in Canada
- Video games set in China
- Video games set in France
- Video games set in Germany
- Video games set in Hungary
- Video games set in Indiana
- Video games set in Italy
- Video games set in Japan
- Video games set in Malaysia
- Video games set in Monaco
- Video games set in Shanghai
- Video games set in Spain
- Video games set in Turkey
- Video games set in the United Kingdom