Mean Machines: The Essential Sega Guide (UK) Vypusk 1 (RU)Įntsiklopediya luchshikh igr Sega. This also means less of the road is visible to the player.Įntsiklopediya luchshikh igr Sega. The Game Gear port is much the same as the Master System conversion, but has to reduce the size of its HUD further in order to fit all important details onto the screen. While the track layouts are broadly the same, hills are less pronounced on the Master System, and take longer to complete due to the aforementioned speed issues.Īll digitised sound has been removed, as has the rev counter in the HUD.
On the Master System, the top speed is lowered, and much of the road-side scenery has been removed, and there appears to be fewer racers on the track at any given time. The Master System version of Road Rash retains the vast majority of content over its Mega Drive counterpart, though most of the graphics were re-drawn for the smaller resolution and fewer colours given by the hardware. On the Mega Drive, Road Rash was followed by Road Rash II and Road Rash 3: Tour De Force. You may choose which level to play each time. Race courses are littered with everything from hills to traffic to roadside obstacles that can hurt a competitor or the player, and since the races run in real time, crashing is costly, as you must get in the top 3 to move on to the next level. Damage is incurred by punching competitors ( ) or ramming into them.
In Road Rash, the player competes in illegal street races in California, where competitors are given free will to deliberately damage competitors to get to first place.