Dirt Track Racing Games For Pc Download

  1. Dirt Track Racing Games For Pc Download 2017
  2. Dirt Track Racing Games For Computer

Dirt Track Racing 2 attempts to capture all aspects of this gritty sport. As in most racing games, you can drive in a single race or start a complete career. In single races you can pick the track, number of opponents, number of laps and the car you drive. PC; Even with all of Dirt Track Racing's finer points, it's hard to overlook its repetitive tracks and racing events. Dirt Track Racing Free Download. An authentic dirt track racing game that allows you to advance from qualification to the championship in stock to late model cars. Home > PC Games > Dirt Track Racing. That you can actually tell if the dirt on track surface is dry (causing more spinouts) or tacky (keeping you stuck to. Dirt Track Racing 2 Game is a Racing video game developed by Ratbag Games, and published by Atari, SA. Dirt Track Racing 2 pc Game is released on September 1, 2002. Dirt Track Gladiators is a free racing game in which the player’s mission is to run as fast as they can. Basically, it is an addictive racing game where the players will the most adventurous and dangerous tracks from all over the world. Pc, web Genre Racing, Sampler Rating Rated 'E ' for No Descriptors Summary In Dirt Track Racing 2, players race against 14 other vehicles with three classes of cars: pro stock, late model.

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Capturing the exact experience of competition, Dirt Track Racing 2 straps you in the driver's seat with a realistic racing simulation like you've never seen before. Get down and dirty on the track with a faster class of vehicles and progress through various series from hobby stock to the late models. Dirt Track Racing is back. Offering an extreme style of exciting game play that made its predecessors so successful. With new tracks, mind blowing graphics, intense special effects, amazing sounds and introducing a new class of cars to race, the 'Modifieds'.

Dirt Track Racing Games For Pc Download 2017

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By Dwayne Baird |

Dirt Track Racing Games For Computer

Having been born and raised in North Carolina, I'm certainly no stranger to careening around dirt roads at breakneck speeds just for the pure thrill of it. Hell, NASCAR was born out of running liquor from the cops on the back roads of North Carolina, showing that even the most high-tech forms of modern racing owe their roots to little more than Billy Bob taking his hot rod out for a joy ride. So, with so many high-profile NASCAR and Formula 1 racing sims, it seemed about time that someone should take racing back to its most basic form -- and that's exactly what Ratbag, the developers of last year's Powerslide, has done with Dirt Track Racing (DTR). They've accurately simulated the look, feel, and spirit of racing at small, local, short track venues.

In DTR, you aren't going up against the likes of Jeff Gordon or Jean Alesi. Instead, you might be racing against Joe Fields, a grocer from Iowa, or Walter Cunningham, a barber from Minnesota. Regular schmoes with little more than a beat-up old Dodge and a love of racing. DTR simulates short track venues, ranging from quick sprint 1/8 mile tracks to mile long ovals (and the occasional figure 8). This is racing where the total circuit winnings may be less than $6000, and you're likely to be speeding around a track next to a corn field.

You can opt to simply jump into a quick race to practice your skills, or go for the more meaningful career mode. In the latter, you start out your career with $1000 at your disposal. Your first car purchase will be at the local junkyard. Your car won't be pretty, but the engine still hums, and it's a perfect vehicle for the beginning tracks you'll compete on ... dirt ovals. When you start off, you'll only have the option to enter competitions in the basic Stock class. But as you win more races and acquire more winnings, you'll eventually have the opportunity to upgrade your car and enter Pro Stock and Late Model competitions. This ladder system really gives you something to work for in the game, and it's not like most racing sims where you just start off as one of the best racers in the world and get to compete against other big name racers. Instead, you start at the bottom of the barrel and have to work your way up. In this way, Ratbag really did an excellent job of capturing the spirit of semi-pro racing.

Ratbag immerses you even further into short track racing with the exquisite visuals. The Difference Engine from Powerslide is back, and it looks as beautiful as ever. From the primered cars to the dusty tracks, from the grand stands to the local billboard advertisements, everything looks like you would expect it to look at a small venue race. And, even more important, everything looks real. Sure, the tracks are sparsely detailed, and there are no pit crews waiting in the wings, but the same thing holds true in real life dirt track racing. You can choose from several different driving views while speeding around the tracks, such as outside behind to car, or a forward view, with or without the dashboard. The cars themselves are fine representations of junkers, right down to the shotty paint jobs, and cars actually crimp and bend when they're damaged. And, while the damage model may not be the most realistic in terms of affecting performance, it goes a lot further in creating a realistic simulation than many racing titles.

Dirt track racing video game

Since DTR comes in at under $20 at most retail outlets, you might expect a watered down racing game. Well, this is far from reality. DTR offers all of the options you can find in a $50 title. Are you a tweaker who loves to tinker around with every single aspect of your car? Well go ahead and adjust your toe in/toe out settings, the chassis weight distribution, the brake strength, the gear ratio, your tire compound, and the bump dampening. Are you into multiplay? DTR lets you race against nine other competitors in a low-lag race, and works with GameSpy, making finding a race partner a breeze. Ratbag left absolutely no stone unturned when producing DTR.

As good as it looks and as impressed as I was by the number of options, the appeal of all racing games still come down to the feel of the car, and Ratbag certainly didn't disappoint on this front either. Dirt track racing is completely different than street racing, and Ratbag captured the feel of sliding around a dirt surface perfectly. It's so realistic, in fact, that you can actually tell if the dirt on track surface is dry (causing more spinouts) or tacky (keeping you stuck to the surface better) by the way the car handles. One of the problems I had with Powerslide was that the controls felt too lose, and you often felt like you were floating a few inches off of the ground. Even though DTR uses the same physics engine, the Ratbag team has tightened it up, making for an even better feeling racing experience than Powerslide. Even though I thought I would get tired of the basic oval tracks when I started the game, DTR never lost its charm, and I have to credit the physics of the title with keeping me glued to my steering just to drive around a mile circle 20 times.

Simply said, this is the best title I've ever played that was originally released for under $20, in any genre. I can't say enough good things about DTR. Besides a few minor quibbles with the damage model and the monotonous engine noise, there's nothing it's lacking. It's rare that you find this much attention to detail in full-priced racing games, much less in a bargain bin racer. With DTR, Ratbag once again shows that they know how to do racing, and they've produced another high-speed title that has a good chance at being named IGNPC's Racing Game of the Year, just like Powerslide last year.

-- Tal Blevins