There's a great variety of these games, and they're a blast to play in the game's party mode. It's all about setting the right angle for your driver's launch and sending him hurling toward whatever object the game requires for maximum points. All the stunts revolve directly around launching your driver, be it in a game of high jump, long jump, bowling, basketball, baseball, or royal flush. Stunt mode also hasn't been upgraded much, though the stunts are still a blast to play.
You start out with a clunker of a derby car, race through a series of unlockable events, unlock new car classes, buy more cars, buy upgrades, and progress as you would through any standard career mode in a racer. FlatOut mode is the game's career mode and hasn't been altered much from FlatOut 2. After all, there are so many different ways to play it that you're bound to enjoy something. You'll get used to how the cars feel as you play, but something about this feel combined with the lack of true differentiation among cars makes the racing less interesting than you might hope for.Ĭar handling quibbles aside, you will have fun with FlatOut: Ultimate Carnage. That might be OK if the cars didn't feel so floaty and generally off-kilter from the outset. Again, you notice differences in speed, but no matter how much you crank up the handling rating or the weight rating, you'll still feel like you're driving the same basic car across the board. All of these categories can also be upgraded via new parts in the FlatOut mode, but even these upgrades lack a measure of tangibility. Each car has several ratings in categories, such as speed, acceleration, strength, weight, and the like. Size is really the only major difference, and even that is purely cosmetic (big trucks trump small racers in crashes, and so on). The problem is, except for the expected differences in speed, none of the cars handle all that differently from one another. There are three car classes in the game: derby, race, and street. BugBear definitely could have stood to improve the way the cars handle. The sheer dynamism of the game's destructible elements is quite impressive, and that fact that the game runs at such a smooth clip while all this carnage is going on is also a big bonus.Īs excellent as the racing looks, it doesn't always play quite as wonderfully. It's customary to see tracks completely littered with tires, logs, broken glass, shopping carts, lamp posts, shorn car parts, and all manner of other destroyed bric-a-brac by the time you reach the last laps.
On the track, there are tons of objects to knock around and break apart, considerably more than in FlatOut 2.
Cars are much more detailed (and there's more of them on the track now, with up to 12 drivers instead of the previous eight), and the wrecks are far more elaborate. Apart from basic upgrades, such as improved lighting, as well as better smoke and water effects, BugBear has vastly improved the look of on-track action.
The visual upgrade is more than just the standard upscaling of the existing visual assets. If you ever played FlatOut 2, you'll notice the difference the second you lay rubber to the track. The good news is that Ultimate Carnage takes the groundwork laid by FlatOut 2 and improves it by a good measure. But as luck would have it, offroad Burnout is still pretty fun. The grit and dirty destruction of the first game were sanded down, until all that was left was an offroad Burnout clone. Arguably, FlatOut 2 wasn't quite as entertaining as its predecessor because the game took the series in a slicker, less grimy-feeling direction.
Whether you're bashing opponents into trees while crashing through walls of tires and leaping off rooftops in standard races, getting your crash on in straight-up demolition derbies, or flinging the driver of your car through your windshield into a set of bowling pins or a series of flaming rings, one theme remains constant throughout: wrecking everything-and wrecking it good. It might mostly be FlatOut 2 all over again, but Ultimate Carnage sure does look a hell of a lot better.įor those who are not in the know about this FlatOut business, the FlatOut series is all about demolition racing. While you can't help but feel like developer BugBear might have just been better off making a proper FlatOut sequel instead of reheating its last game, the upgrades made here are significant enough to make the game stand on its own. However, it also comes with some new modes and vehicles to help flesh out the package a bit more. It's got the prerequisite shiny new graphics and additional on-track carnage. The newly released FlatOut: Ultimate Carnage is actually just a reworking of 2006's demolition racer FlatOut 2.