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Category

Vehicular combat games

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Bump 'n' Jump
1982 video game
Cars 3: Driven to Win
racing video game based on the 2017 film Cars 3 by Walt Disney
vehicular combat game
genre of video game
Carmageddon TDR 2000
2000 video game
Star Wars: Demolition
2000 video game
Twisted Metal: Small Brawl
2001 video game
Wacky Wheels
1994 video game
Special Criminal Investigation
1989 video game
Action Fighter
1986 video game
Digimon Racing
2004 video game
X
1992 video game for Game Boy Color by Argonaut Games and Nintendo.
POD
1997 video game
Pursuit Force
2005 video game
187 Ride or Die
2005 video game
FlatOut 4: Total Insanity
2017 video game
Interstate '76
1997 video game
Interstate '82
1999 video game
RoadBlasters
RoadBlasters is a 1987 vehicular combat video game developed and published by Atari Games for arcades. The player navigates an armed sports car through 50 different rally races, getting to the finish line before running out of fuel. Ports were released for a variety of home systems by Tengen and U.S. Gold.
Mashed
2004 video game
Crashday
Crashday is a destruction derby/racing/car stunts game co-developed by Replay Studios and Moonbyte Games and published by Atari Europe. It was released in February 2006.
APB
1987 video game
LittleBigPlanet Karting
2012 video game
Rogue Trip: Vacation 2012
1998 video game
Vangers
Vangers (Вангеры, also known as Vangers: One for the Road) is a racing role-playing video game developed by K-D Lab, a Russian company. It was released in North America in June 29, 1998 after receiving positive responses at that year's E3. An updated re-release was made available on Steam and GOG.com in 2014. The re-release includes support for Mac OS X and Linux.
Batman Returns
1992 video game series based on movie on same name
Speed Freaks
1999 video game
R.C. Pro-Am II
1992 racing video game
BC Racers
1994 video game
Renegade Ops
2011 video game
MegaRace
MegaRace is a vehicular combat game developed by Cryo for MS-DOS and published by The Software Toolworks in 1993. Ports to Sega CD and 3DO were released the following year. It uses pre-rendered 3-D graphics and includes over twenty minutes of full-motion video of fictional game show host Lance Boyle.
Demolition Racer
1999 video game
Street Racer
1994 racing video game
Power Rangers Zeo: Battle Racers
1996 racing video game
Road Rash 3D
1998 video game
Auto Assault
2006 video game
Hi-Octane
Hi-Octane is a 1995 vehicular combat and racing video game published by Electronic Arts for MS-DOS, PlayStation, and Sega Saturn. It was developed by Bullfrog Productions based upon their earlier Magic Carpet game code. The tracks are wider and more open than most racing games. Hi-Octane was not as well received as the thematically similar Wipeout by Psygnosis and was criticized for the short view distance. Bullfrog also released an expansion pack with three new tracks and new game modes.
Extreme-G
Extreme-G is a futuristic racing video game developed by Probe Entertainment and published by Acclaim Entertainment, featuring an original trance soundtrack. It was released for the Nintendo 64 in 1997, with a Japan release on May 29, 1998. Despite the competitive landscape of Nintendo 64 racing games, Extreme-G received moderately positive reviews and achieved commercial success. A sequel, Extreme-G 2, was launched in 1998, followed by two additional titles: Extreme-G 3 (2001) and XGRA: Extreme-G Racing Association (2003). In 2024, the game was re-released through the Nintendo Classics servic
WWE Crush Hour
2003 video game
Extreme-G 2
1998 video game
Armored Warfare
2015 video game
Vice: Project Doom
1991 video game
Road Rash: Jailbreak
2000 video game
Need for Speed Carbon: Own the City
2006 video game
Redline
1999 video game
Clutch
2009 video game
Lil cal 64
2006 video game
Downtown Run
2003 video game
RPM Racing
1992 video game
Calling All Cars!
2007 video game
Destruction Derby 2
1996 video game
XXX (video game)
XXX is a 2002 action video game developed by Digital Eclipse and published by Activision for the Game Boy Advance. Based on the film of the same name, the narrative follows Xander "xXx" Cage, an underground thrill-seeker who is recruited as a spy to stop the evil Anarchy 99 organization before it unleashes an assault on the Earth. Much of the game is played in a side-scrolling run and gun format, while a few levels feature vehicular combat inspired by Road Rash. The game was developed in approximately two months and received mixed reviews upon release, with critics faulting the gameplay's lack of innovation, simplistic AI, and short length, though the visuals and music were assessed positively.
Alien Front Online
2001 video game
Fatal Racing
1996 video game
Starsky & Hutch
2003 video game
Hot Wheels: Beat That!
2007 racing video game
Badlands
1989 video game
Destruction AllStars
2021 vehicular combat video game developed by Lucid Games
Road Rash 64
1999 video game
LocoCycle
LocoCycle is an action-adventure beat-'em-up video game developed by Twisted Pixel Games and published by Microsoft Studios. Originally announced as an Xbox Live Arcade title at E3 2012, LocoCycle was released in November 2013 for Xbox One in its digital storefronts as a launch title that coincided with the release of the Xbox One, and on February 14, 2014 for Microsoft Windows and Xbox 360. The Xbox One version was localized for Japan for release on September 4, 2014.
Autoduel
Autoduel is a role-playing video game published by Origin Systems for the Atari 8-bit computers, Commodore 64, Apple II, and IBM PC compatibles in 1985. It was released in 1987 for the Atari ST and in 1988 for the Amiga and Macintosh. The game is based on the Steve Jackson Games series Car Wars.