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Freestyle MetalX is an extreme sports video game developed by British developer Deibus Studios and released in 2003 by Midway for PlayStation 2, GameCube and Xbox. [4] It is a 3D motorcycle stunt game that rewards the player for pulling off difficult moves.
Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF; ... Pages in category "Motorcycle video games" The following 116 pages are in this category, out of 116 total.
Crazee Rider is a motorbike racing video game created by Kevin Edwards and published by Superior Software in 1987. [1] It was released for the Acorn Electron and BBC Micro with an enhanced version for the BBC Master. The game was particularly well received for the Electron as it was the first 3D racing game with corners for that machine ...
The game is known for its realism, including terrain, audio, and "bone-chilling" motorcycle wrecks. If the player is in Stunt mode and goes out of bounds after climbing a large cliff, an "invisible slingshot" will cause the player and the bike fly across the map while a funny sound plays until both objects hit the ground. [4]
The user controls a motorcycle through races on various paved courses; it features tracks and motorcycles from the 2000 Superbike World Championship season. [1] The game allows the player to choose between three game modes: Quick Start, Single Race, and Championship mode. [1] Quick Start allows the user to quickly pick up a game and begin to ...
Players are able to create a male or female MX rider of their own and play in either two modes: racing or freestyle. [3] [4] The former consists of races against opposing racers controlled by artificial intelligence, while the latter consists of levels taking place in various environments where the player must independently accomplish certain challenges. [3]
The game is based on the 2013 FIM Motocross World Championship and includes 14 tracks (including Arco, Trentino, Sevlievo and Loket) and features deformable terrain. [ citation needed ] The third installment in the series, now MXGP3 and dropping " The Official Videogame" from its title, was released on 12 May 2017 for Microsoft Windows ...
The game was originally to be published by BMG Interactive, but after BMG closed down its U.S. operations [7] it sold the publication rights to Electronic Arts. [8] Critics hailed the game as the first outstanding arcade-style racer to appear on PC, and the PlayStation version in turn was called a strong conversion in reviews.