V-Rally

V-Rally

European PlayStation cover art
Developer(s) Eden Studios (PlayStation, PC, Nintendo 64)
Velez & Dubail (Game Boy and Game Boy Color
Publisher(s)

PlayStation

Microsoft Windows, Game Boy Color & Nintendo 64

Game Boy
Ocean Software

Director(s) Stéphane Baudet
Designer(s) Stéphane Baudet
Platform(s) PlayStation, Windows, Game Boy, Nintendo 64, Game Boy Color
Release date(s)

PlayStation

  • EU: July, 1997[1]
  • NA: September 30, 1997[2]
  • JP: January 8, 1998

Microsoft Windows

Edition '99

  • NA: August 31, 1999
  • EU: September 1999

Game Boy

Nintendo 64

  • EU: December 7, 1998
  • NA: August 31, 1999[3][4]
  • JP: October 14, 1999

Game Boy Color

  • EU: 1999
  • NA: June, 1999
  • JP: October 14, 1999
Genre(s) Racing
Mode(s) Single-player, multiplayer

V-Rally is a 1997 rally racing video game, developed by Eden Studios for the PlayStation and published by Infogrames. The budget Platinum re-release of the PlayStation version added support for DualShock controllers. The game was a bestseller in the UK for 3 months.[5]

Titles

The game was released under different titles in all countries. The original European PlayStation release was titled as V-Rally 97 Championship Edition, with it's Platinum and Japanese versions being re-titled as V-Rally Championship Edition. In North America this version was released as Need for Speed: V-Rally because Electronic Arts acquired the rights to publish the game in order to help sales, due to the fact that rally racing held little support in the USA, yet V-Rally isn't apart of the Need for Speed series because EA didn't make it. The first Windows release was known as V-Rally Multiplayer Championship Edition and the later 1999 version as V-Rally Edition 99(The PC version only saw a release in Europe). The Nintendo 64 version was released under the V-Rally Edition 99 name in all countries it was released in. The European Game Boy and Game Boy Color versions were released under the V-Rally Championship Edition name and the American and Japanese GBC version as V-Rally Edition 99.

Symbian UIQ version

There was a Symbian UIQ version designed for mobile phone such as Sony Ericsson P910/P900/P800.

It includes 11 configurable cars, 13 tracks of the 1997 FIA World Rally Championship season.

V-Rally Edition '99

V-Rally Edition '99, a Nintendo 64, PC port of the game, was released in 1999, offering slightly improved graphics and menus. Includes all cars and tracks of the 1998 FIA World Rally Championship.

Game Boy Color version

It includes 20 stages in 10 worldwide locations.

Gameplay

Unlike other rally games available at the time, such as Colin McRae Rally, V-Rally allowed two players to race directly against one another, rather than against the clock, in a split screen mode.

In both games, players can race in 10 locations. The game includes 11 official World Rally Championship cars, with 4 from WRC and 7 from Formula 2 Kit Cars.

Reception

Reception
Review scores
PublicationScore
PCPS
GameSpot5.4/10[6]
IGN-8/10[7]
Aggregate score
GameRankings72.85%[8]

The Official PlayStation Magazine praised the graphics and the 2-player mode, and said the game was "a huge game, by far the most comprehensive racer on this or any other platform since Psygnosis' F1", 9/10.

See also

References and notes

  1. V-Rally at GameSpot. URL retrieved on August 18, 2006.
  2. Need for Speed: V-Rally at GameSpot. URL retrieved on June 22, 2006.
  3. V-Rally Edition '99 (N64) at GameSpot. URL retrieved on June 22, 2006.
  4. V-Rally Edition '99 (WIN) at GameSpot. URL retrieved on June 22, 2006.
  5. Gallup UK Playstation sales chart, November 1997, published in Official UK PlayStation Magazine issue 25
  6. GameSpot Staff (December 5, 1997). "Need for Speed: V-Rally Review". GameSpot. Retrieved March 30, 2014.
  7. IGN Staff (November 5, 1997). "Need For Speed: V-Rally". IGN. Retrieved March 30, 2014.
  8. "Need For Speed: V-Rally". GameRankings. Retrieved March 30, 2014.
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