![]() ![]() It doesn't work like Burnout or Need for Speed. ![]() It's all flash and dash, all style over substance you swerve through each scene like the Connery-era Bond, directed by Michael Mann. I don't know where drifting fits into this analogy. It's not you against physics, it's you against a highly controlled and malevolent environment. You run along the straights occasionally jumping over enemies (or, if you prefer, "overtaking other drivers") and at the end of each section there's a boss encounter (a corner) with a very specific set of weaknesses that must be assessed and exploited. There is an argument to be made (at least by me, and I could be alone) that Ridge Racer has always worked more like a platformer than a racing simulation.
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