TrackMania (2003 video game)
TrackMania is a racing video game developed by Nadeo and published by Focus Home Interactive. It is the first game in the TrackMania series.
Gameplay
TrackMania includes some pre-constructed tracks that players can race on to unlock "coppers", the in-game currency. These can be used to buy different building blocks, usually called "blocks", for their track, including regular roads, checkpoints, long bends, loop-the-loops, and jumps, which all snap to a grid automatically. Regular roads can be dragged to create straight sections as well as 90 degree corners. Most other blocks are automatically connected by placing them next to each other. There are three environments to choose from: Rally, Snow, and Desert, each of which offers a unique car and handling characteristics. There are also three modes: Race, Puzzle, and Survival, each of which features an equal number of tracks for each environment. The "Survival" mode does not appear in the later games, though Platform bears some slight similarities in map styles.TrackMania has three styles of cars, rally super minis, alpine 4x4s, and speed muscle cars. Each has numerous skins making a total of 87 different looking cars available. Using the built-in car painter or an external graphics editor, players can create their own skins, or modify the originals.
The game features a multiplayer option, which allows players to compete via hotseat or a LAN, and over the Internet while players may upload their created tracks or skins to the game's website for use by other players.
Reception
The game received "average" reviews according to the review aggregation website Metacritic. Alex Navarro of GameSpot called the game "completely worth it if you have any interest in PC driving games or ever liked miniature cars as a kid." Saying that "the driving mechanics aren't perfect, and it isn't much to look at," he nevertheless called it "a great game with plenty of depth and lasting appeal." Scott Osborne of GameSpy called the races "fast-paced and reasonably fun," but also said that "they're often too easy and always much too short," criticizing the brevity of the game's single-player and puzzle mode. Tom McNamara of IGN said that "the game looks pretty good," but that it was "not fun to play so much as being fun to play around with," ultimately calling it "a temporary diversion" that "just can't compete with the big boys."GameSpot described the game as the best computer game of July 2004. The game was also a runner-up for the site's "Most Surprisingly Good Game" award, which went to The Chronicles of Riddick: Escape from Butcher Bay.