Test Drive 6

★★★★★ 4.6 137 reviews

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Management number 221728038 Release Date 2026/05/03 List Price $16.39 Model Number 221728038
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Product description Complete in box Small crack on case Amazon.com By marrying arcade controls with real cars, upgradeable car systems, and multiple play modes, Test Drive 6 attempts to be the driving game for everyone. The result is a fragmented, ordinary game lacking the focus to be suited for a particular type of gaming audience. The game purports to offer the thrill of driving a selection of testosterone-charged real cars in some of the world's most scenic locations. But instead of hitting top speed on the open road or doing doughnuts on the Vatican's lawn, you must race a bunch of veteran professional drivers around a number of preset tracks with hairpin turns. Even that could be fun, but here the tracks are missing the shortcuts and power-ups of an arcade racing game, and the cars are missing the accurate physics and customization of a simulation racing game. This "neither here nor there" approach applies to all of Test Drive 6, a game that on the surface is packed with features, most of which, on digging deeper, add nothing to gameplay. Play modes include single and groups of races where you wager money or your pink slip; cop chases where you try to pull over speeding cars; and two-player mode. The economic system by which players purchase and upgrade cars seems out of place, and the game's graphics are merely passable. --Jeff YoungPros:Great soundtrack, including the entire video for Fear Factory's remake of Gary Numan's "Cars"Nice collection of new and classic hot rodsCons:Too shallow for a racing simulation, too difficult to be an arcade gamePoor handling cars and poorly designed tracks P.when('A').execute(function(A) { A.on('a:expander:toggle_description:toggle:collapse', function(data) { window.scroll(0, data.expander.$expander[0].offsetTop-100); }); }); Review The Dreamcast's incarnation of Test Drive 6 is essentially a direct port of the PlayStation version. Consequently, all the woes associated with the PlayStation's version are reborn in the DC's, and given the platform's potential, they are excruciatingly more glaring. In effect what Pitbull Syndicate has tried to accomplish with TD6 is an amalgamation of the no-frills arcade-style racer and a detailed racing sim. Neither of which is fully realized, sadly, as both aspects continually undermine each other. The experience offered by TD6 is reminiscent of early jump-in-and-play racers; the vehicles handle like cake, and most in-track obstacles are simply meant to be plowed through. The game encourages a speed-through approach to racing; the only brake you'll use is the hand brake, which by default executes vicious powerslides. The tracks' roads are merely suggestions; the cars lose very little speed when offtrack, allowing for some truly wacky race narratives. TD6's play modes, while seemingly plentiful, totally hint at a nonrealized level of depth. Along with the requisite two-player mode, the title offers single-race, tournament, challenge, and cop-chase modes. Success in the various modes offers a concrete bonus of cash, which is used to soup up your vehicles. This is, perhaps, the title's most discrepant aspect; while the upgrades do often have a tangible effect on the vehicles' performance, the game's inherent pace causes its simulation aspect to appear sorely out of place. Arcade-style racers, by default, place more emphasis on the actual skill of the racer, rather than any improvements made to his vehicle. Races are won in TD6 by regulating speed - maintaining a workable accelerate/decelerate ratio - and by gracious use of the hand brake. You will most probably find TD6 a bit too shallow to actually invest enough time to use its simulation aspects. More on the play modes: Single race, as the name implies, sets up a one shot competition for you and five other racers in your class, the bounty being a bet you put up that the other racers match. Same deal with tournament races, only you're entered into a series of connected events. Challenges have you driving solo on a course, the goal being to complete it under a certain time. Cop chase is pretty conventional; you're the cop, and your job is to pound racers off of the road to score ticket money, which you can use to upgrade your car. In the end the play modes are rather straightforward, offering the genre no real innovation. If taken as a light arcade racer, this sort of thing would go over OK. Under the pretense of simulation, though, this package totally falls short. The graphics in TD6 are basically the same as the PlayStation version's, with the resolutions upped and some textures cleaned up. They are ultimately a letdown, considering what could have conceivably been done. It seems Pitbull didn't dedicate enough energy to the port; they seem satisfied with releasing a carbon copy. It totally shows, as the game feels graphically more like a current-generation PlayStation title than an early Dreamcast title. The same often-hip soundtrack remains, containing cuts from such acts as Eve 6, Fear Factory, and Cirrus. As before the tracks are looped during each race, and they get redundant pretty quickly. The mute button will be used, especially during particularly lengthy races. In the end it's difficult to call Test Drive 6 a disappointment; having played the game's earlier incarnations has left me with an idea of what to expect. If the arcade-style aspects of the game had worked out more, then perhaps this title would have had an edge in the already-huge market of racers. As is, though, TD6 tries to go in too many directions, which, unfortunately, end up undermining each other. It was sort of weak on the PlayStation. On the Dreamcast it's a primped-up clone of a sort-of-weak game. There are a handful of great racers available for the Dreamcast. It's inconceivable for one to choose TD6 in lieu of a game like Speed Devils or Sega Rally 2.--Miguel Lopez--Copyright © 1998 GameSpot Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of GameSpot is prohibited. -- GameSpot Review See more

UPC 020295150020
Genre Racing
Rated Everyone
Item Weight 3.52 ounces
Manufacturer Ingram
Type of item CD-ROM
Item model number 15102N
Package Dimensions 5.6 x 4.9 x 0.4 inches; 3.52 ounces
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer No

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