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Need for Speed Most Wanted


Best of the NFS series? Believe it

You know that saying about pleasing all of the people all of the time, right? Impossible. That's kind of what Need for Speed has faced as it went from a high-end exotic racer to a cop-chase simulator to a tuner's paradise. With every shift, the franchise lost a few passengers who preferred "the way it was." So here's one game with a little bit of everything: the appropriately titled Need for Speed Most Wanted

You want exotics? Slip behind the wheel of a Lamborghini Gallardo or a Lotus Elise, as well as standard lustmobiles from Mitsubishi, Mazda, and Mercedes-Benz. Miss the police chases? Lead the cops on as many wild goose chases as you like, intentionally taunting them for more street cred. And if customization is your thing, redesign any car as your personal fashion statement, no matter how ugly. However, the cosmetic changes now pay off: if you know the cops are looking for a black Eclipse with red vinyls, change your stripes and frustrate the fuzz. You can tweak the handling of each ride and buy pre-built parts packages to boost performance, but it's literally as easy as picking a new engine from column A and a new spoiler from column B.

The game really shines when the police start chasing you in the middle of a street race; even if you cross the finish line first, the 5-0 don't let go. You'll need to lose them, often by causing so much destruction that they have to stop to mop up your mess. Strong A.I. programming makes for intelligent cops that really make you earn every escape.

Ultimately, the gameplay does devolve into ticking off a checklist of challenges, but since you're also earning money and new cars along the way, it's easy to stay interested, and the challenge level ramps up appropriately. It's a shame that the multiplayer options don't include a cop pursuit mode, but that's a minor omission in a one-game-fits-all package. If you haven't found any of the recent NFS games to be juuuust right, Most Wanted is the one to own.

You'll love
  • Cop chases prove addictively fun
  • Tweaking your car finally has a context
  • Police chatter ratchets up the tension
You'll hate
  • Single-player progress gets repetitive
  • No cop-chase mode in multiplayer?
  • Difficulty gets brutal

 
7 Comments
Order Comments: Newest First | Oldest First
A.J_Smiles  - 1 year 23 days ago 
I found this game to be boring and repetitive. the only thing that kept me going through the whole damn thing were the awsome cars (especially that M3. You know the one. SWEET or what?)
ksufan20  - 1 year 22 days ago 
the game is the shit
Sizzler  - 11 months 5 days ago 
You guys are just bitter. I thought the game was pretty amazing.
nvenom420  - 7 months 7 days ago 
I'm the best at this game!!!!!!!
nvenom420  - 7 months 7 days ago 
use have nothing to say!
EEE  - 4 months 28 days ago 
the best NFS game ever the you dont see the pursuit more real than here because in undrecover the pursuit are very lame
EEE  - 4 months 28 days ago 
the only thing the i dont like on the game is that in two player mode they dind put cops.............that have to haved been cool you racing with a friend and cops showing up
The Knowledge

Need for Speed Most Wanted

Genre: Racing
Release date: 15 Nov 2005
Published by: EA GAMES
Developed by: EA Canada
Features: Dolby Pro Logic II
Multiplayer Modes:
Offline
2 player VS
9 AWESOME
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