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Road Rash is a 1994 racing and vehicular combat video game originally published by Electronic Arts (EA) for the 3DO Interactive Multiplayer.A version for the Sega CD was developed simultaneously and released in 1995 to act as a "bridge" between the 3DO version and the Sega Genesis title Road Rash 3, and the game was subsequently ported to the PlayStation, Sega Saturn, and Microsoft Windows in ...
Road Rash was the 9th best-selling Genesis title in the United Kingdom in February 1992. [32] In the United States, Road Rash was the third highest-renting Genesis title at Blockbuster Video in April 1992, and the ninth highest-renting in the following month. [33] [34] At the time of its release, Road Rash became EA's most profitable title. [13]
Road Rash II is a 1992 racing and vehicular combat game developed and published by Electronic Arts (EA) for the Sega Genesis.The game is centered around a series of motorcycle races throughout the United States that the player must win to advance to higher-difficulty races, while engaging in unarmed and armed combat to hinder the other racers.
Road Rash 3 is a 1995 racing and vehicular combat video game developed and published by Electronic Arts (EA) for the Sega Genesis. It is the fourth installment in the Road Rash series and the last to be released for the Genesis, as well as the last EA title to be developed for the Genesis.
Crazy Cars: Hit the Road: Little World Entertainment Anuman: PC, iOS, Droid 2012 Crazy Frog Racer: Neko Entertainment: Digital Jesters: WIN, PS2, NDS, GBA 2005 Crazy Frog Racer 2: Neko Entertainment: Valcon Games: WIN, PS2 2007-09-04 Crazy Taxi: Hitmaker, Acclaim Studios Cheltenham, Strangelite Sega, Acclaim Entertainment, Activision Value
"Rusty Cage" was part of the soundtrack of the 1994 bike racing game, Road Rash, [10] which received 3DO's 1994 "Soundtrack of the Year" award. The song appeared on the fictional radio station "Radio X" in the 2004 video game Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas. [11] However, these versions are all 1 minute and 43 seconds shorter than the album version.
Road Rash 3D won the "Outstanding Achievement in Sound and Music" award at AIAS' 2nd Annual Interactive Achievement Awards [20] and was a finalist for "8th Annual GamePro Readers' Choice Awards" for "Best Racing Game of The Year", but lost to Gran Turismo. [21] [22]
The Game Boy Advance version of Road Rash: Jailbreak received "average" reviews according to the review aggregation website Metacritic. [6] Game Informer gave it an unfavorable review, over a month before it was released. [11] Doug Trueman of NextGen said in his bottom line that the first Road Rash was still better than the PlayStation version ...