marauder307
10-20-2003, 07:57 AM
I don't get out much these days...read into that whatever you like:rolleyes:...so I spend a lotta time at home after work. Recently I decided to retry a (now old) video game that I enjoyed the he11 out of 'bout 6 years back...Interstate '76.
In a demonstration of just how geeky I really am:P , I've got the Gold version, the Arsenal pack, and the sequel Interstate '82.
I'76 is a story-driven game set in an alternate world in the '70s Southwestern U.S. The bad guys have taken over the roads, and your sister named Jade Champion, along with a bad-a$$ soul brother named Taurus and a stereotyped doofus mechanic named Skeeter, have been fighting the road vigilante fight in the wilds of western Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona. She gets wiped by the head baddie, a guy named Malochio, and you (named Groove Champion, lol) spend the game chasing him down through his cohorts in crime.
The opening scenes are pretty cool...running 100 mph+ gunbattle between Malochio's Corvette and your sister's Hemi-Cuda. In an effort to avoid trademark troubles with all of the various car companies, Activision changed all the names...sorta. For example, the Plymouth 'Cuda becomes the Picard Piranha. The Corvette becomes the Courcheval Manta, and so on. The Arsenal pack adds some nifty scenarios, including an opening scene that introduces Taurus to Jade. It also adds some cars that weren't represented in the first game, like the El Camino, the '69 Charger, the '70 GTO, the VW Bug (you also get a clown car version), the Jaguar XKE, and so on.
For us, the car to pick would be the 1970 Lincoln Towncar (renamed the Jefferson Sovereign). The Arsenal pack adds a pimped-out version in all red with gold trim and bumpers. You haven't had fun until you spec'd this sucker out with twin .50s, radar-guided missles, and a flamethrower. Sounds like the kinda car I wish I had for the daily commute in south STL.:flamer:
Only problem I have with it now is that it was written for Win 98 machines, not the P4 I have now. The game keeps shutting down on me. Oh well...I should take that as a sign to get a life, I suppose.:rolleyes: Anyway, it's fun. Anybody else tried to put this thing on their late-model computer?
In a demonstration of just how geeky I really am:P , I've got the Gold version, the Arsenal pack, and the sequel Interstate '82.
I'76 is a story-driven game set in an alternate world in the '70s Southwestern U.S. The bad guys have taken over the roads, and your sister named Jade Champion, along with a bad-a$$ soul brother named Taurus and a stereotyped doofus mechanic named Skeeter, have been fighting the road vigilante fight in the wilds of western Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona. She gets wiped by the head baddie, a guy named Malochio, and you (named Groove Champion, lol) spend the game chasing him down through his cohorts in crime.
The opening scenes are pretty cool...running 100 mph+ gunbattle between Malochio's Corvette and your sister's Hemi-Cuda. In an effort to avoid trademark troubles with all of the various car companies, Activision changed all the names...sorta. For example, the Plymouth 'Cuda becomes the Picard Piranha. The Corvette becomes the Courcheval Manta, and so on. The Arsenal pack adds some nifty scenarios, including an opening scene that introduces Taurus to Jade. It also adds some cars that weren't represented in the first game, like the El Camino, the '69 Charger, the '70 GTO, the VW Bug (you also get a clown car version), the Jaguar XKE, and so on.
For us, the car to pick would be the 1970 Lincoln Towncar (renamed the Jefferson Sovereign). The Arsenal pack adds a pimped-out version in all red with gold trim and bumpers. You haven't had fun until you spec'd this sucker out with twin .50s, radar-guided missles, and a flamethrower. Sounds like the kinda car I wish I had for the daily commute in south STL.:flamer:
Only problem I have with it now is that it was written for Win 98 machines, not the P4 I have now. The game keeps shutting down on me. Oh well...I should take that as a sign to get a life, I suppose.:rolleyes: Anyway, it's fun. Anybody else tried to put this thing on their late-model computer?