TOCA 2: Touring Cars | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Codemasters |
Publisher(s) | Codemasters |
Series | TOCA |
Platform(s) | PlayStation, Windows |
Release | |
Genre(s) | Racing |
Mode(s) | Single-player, multiplayer |
TOCA 2: Touring Cars (TOCA 2: Touring Car Challenge in North America) is a British racing video game developed and published by Codemasters for PlayStation and Microsoft Windows. It is the second game in the TOCA series, based on the 1998 season of the British Touring Car Championship. Mainly an annual franchise update of cars and tracks, the game added more detailed graphics, physics, multiplayer modes and other minor features. Realistic tracks were added, and support races such as Ford Fiestas, Formula Ford and others also arrived. The level of car damage possible during a race was also enhanced, which was a significant selling point compared with the likes of Gran Turismo which had no damage model at the time.
The game modes include the support races such as Formula Ford and the Ford Fiesta Championships, a test track mode where the player tests any car on certain variations of the test track, a Championship mode which is dependent on the length with the difficulty selected, a feature new to the game is the support cars are able to be chosen with the colour the player prefers. A challenge mode is included to see how fast the player can get to the checkpoints in a limited amount of time. The single race mode allows the player to select the track to race on, as well as the weather conditions, laps raced and allowance for computer cars for one or more players. Similar to the first game, once the players select a car, they replace a driver and partner the other driver, but unlike the first TOCA game, this time they replace the second team driver, not the first.
The standard cars featured are the Audi A4, Ford Mondeo, Honda Accord, Nissan Primera, Peugeot 406, Renault Laguna, Vauxhall Vectra and Volvo S40. The support cars are the AC Superblower, Ford Fiesta, Formula Ford, Grinnall Scorpion, Jaguar XJ220, Lister Storm and TVR Speed 12.
All the tracks used in the various championships, including the main BTCC championship, are real racing tracks in Great Britain. These are as follows: Thruxton; Silverstone; Donington Park; Brands Hatch; Oulton Park; Croft; Snetterton; and Knockhill. There are bonus tracks and cars which can be accessed through the championship mode.
TOCA 2 for Windows also has the ability to import skins for each car. They can be edited using any paint/drawing program.
The multiplayer mode (known as Linkup Game) allows for two or more players to race on any circuit and also in the Championship mode. TOCA 2 is notable for being one of only four PlayStation games (the others being Wipeout 3: Special Edition , Ridge Racer Type 4 and Andretti Racing ) to feature a four-player mode using the PlayStation's link cable and split-screen at the same time - i.e., four players compete against each other simultaneously using two PlayStation consoles, with two players per console and connected to two televisions.
The main menu background music features "Retro", and the opening video "Soundclash" by E-Z Rollers. Other versions feature "Sole Sentiment" by Ratman in the opening intro.
Aggregator | Score | |
---|---|---|
PC | PS | |
GameRankings | 78% [5] | 79% [6] |
Publication | Score | |
---|---|---|
PC | PS | |
AllGame | [7] | [8] |
CNET Gamecenter | 8/10 [9] | N/A |
Edge | N/A | 9/10 [3] |
Game Informer | N/A | 6.5/10 [10] |
GameFan | 91% [11] | N/A |
GamePro | [12] | N/A |
GameSpot | 8.2/10 [13] | 5.4/10 [14] |
IGN | 5.5/10 [15] | 8/10 [16] |
Next Generation | N/A | [17] |
PlayStation Official Magazine – UK | N/A | 9/10 [2] |
Official U.S. PlayStation Magazine | N/A | [18] |
PC Accelerator | 6/10 [19] | N/A |
PC Gamer (US) | 83% [20] | N/A |
The Cincinnati Enquirer | [21] | [21] |
The game received "favorable" reviews on both platforms according to video game review aggregator GameRankings. [5] [6] Official UK PlayStation Magazine said the PlayStation version was an improvement on the original game, with many tracks, but that "the new cars felt tacked on". [2] Rick Sanchez of NextGen said of the same console version, "Hands down, TOCA 2 [is] one of the best touring-car sims available, and one of the best new driving games for PlayStation." [17]
The PC version was nominated for PC PowerPlay 's "Best Driving/Racing" award, which went to Grand Theft Auto 2 . [22]
Moto Racer, mislabeled as Moto Racer Gold, is an arcade style motorcycle racing game developed by Delphine Software International and published by Electronic Arts for Microsoft Windows and PlayStation. The game was originally to be published by BMG Interactive, but after BMG closed down its U.S. operations it sold the publication rights to Electronic Arts. Critics hailed the game as the first outstanding arcade-style racer to appear on PC, and the PlayStation version in turn was called a strong conversion in reviews.
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TOCA Race Driver 3 is a racing video game developed and published by Codemasters for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 2, Xbox, PlayStation Portable and OS X. It is the sixth game in the TOCA series. The game features several fully licensed championships, including the DTM series and V8 Supercar championship. This is the last in the series to have TOCA in its title as following on from this TOCA was dropped in favour of just Race Driver, which later became the Grid series. Despite featuring the name TOCA in its title, the game did not feature the British Touring Car Championship. The game received positive reviews, frequently being compared favourably to Gran Turismo 4 and Forza Motorsport, in the aspects of cars on track, collision and wear damage.
TOCA is a racing video game series developed and published by Codemasters. The series originally focused specifically on touring car racing, but after World Touring Cars, the series expanded to cover a wide variety of motorsport. The TOCA series was eventually succeeded by the Grid series of games, with Race Driver: Grid released in 2008.
TOCA: Touring Car Championship is a 3D racing video game licensed by series organisers TOCA, and developed and published by Codemasters for the PlayStation and Microsoft Windows platforms in 1997-1998. It was re-released by Codemasters for the Game Boy Color in 2000. It was the first entry in the eponymous series and was followed by TOCA 2 Touring Cars in 1998. The player takes control of a driver who races for one of the eight works teams that contested the 1997 British Touring Car Championship against fifteen AI competitors on one of the nine championship circuits. A championship mode is available for players with the objective of earning points to continue competing and unlocking new features.
TOCA World Touring Cars is a 2000 racing video game developed and published by Codemasters for PlayStation and Game Boy Advance. It is the third game in the TOCA series.
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Released November 27