Archon
18th August 2012, 04:21 PM
Burnout Paradise is currently available for download from the PlayStation Store for fifteen bucks. Considering how difficult a physical copy is to find (Amazon's selling for $30 + shipping, GameStop is clean out), would anyone recommend this purchase? The demo is no longer available so I cannot try the game for myself.
I owned Burnout 3 on PS2. It was only entertaining for a short while. Once I earned the fastest class of cars, the slower models felt just that - slow. The courses were straight forward checkpoint races based on continuously boosting. No knowledge of cornering or driving was required; just boosting and throwing the handbrake to drift around corners. The game had more to do with not crashing head-on with traffic than properly driving. Crash mode was awesome, but that was a puzzle game entirely separate from the main racing game. How has Burnout Paradise changed from the PS2 iterations of the series? Does the open-world environment lead to properly designed "courses?"
What makes Wipeout HD my favorite racing game is that it requires proper technique equivalent to an accurate driving simulator while maintaining the unrealistic exhilaration of hurtling through open air offered only in video games. Is Burnout Paradise a skill-demanding racing game, or is it merely a drift program offering mild and short-lived amusement?
I owned Burnout 3 on PS2. It was only entertaining for a short while. Once I earned the fastest class of cars, the slower models felt just that - slow. The courses were straight forward checkpoint races based on continuously boosting. No knowledge of cornering or driving was required; just boosting and throwing the handbrake to drift around corners. The game had more to do with not crashing head-on with traffic than properly driving. Crash mode was awesome, but that was a puzzle game entirely separate from the main racing game. How has Burnout Paradise changed from the PS2 iterations of the series? Does the open-world environment lead to properly designed "courses?"
What makes Wipeout HD my favorite racing game is that it requires proper technique equivalent to an accurate driving simulator while maintaining the unrealistic exhilaration of hurtling through open air offered only in video games. Is Burnout Paradise a skill-demanding racing game, or is it merely a drift program offering mild and short-lived amusement?