Burning Road

Burning Road

Burning Road PAL cover
Developer(s) Toka
Publisher(s) European Union Funsoft
United States Playmates Interactive Entertainment
Japan Vic Tokai
Platform(s) PlayStation
Release date(s)

‹See Tfd›

  • NA: September 30, 1996

‹See Tfd›

  • JP: January 31, 1997
Genre(s) Arcade racing
Mode(s) Single player and Multi player up to 2 players with link cable

Burning Road is a 1996 arcade racing game for PlayStation in which you are timed in races and must race through checkpoints to gain more time. The game differs from other console arcade racing games in that you are timed to pick a track, a car and the transmission like in arcades. There are three difficulty levels: Easy, Medium and Hard.

In-game, there is a 'traffic' radar showing the player where opponents are (around the player's car only). The opponent in the lead has a silver cup icon above their vehicle, if the player gets in the lead, text saying 'RACE LEADER' displays at the top of the screen for a second informing them of being in the lead.

UK magazines at the time often referred to Burning Road as "Dayclona", due to its striking similarities to the Sega Arcade game, Daytona USA.

Game modes

Practice: The mode is the equivalent to single race found in other racing games. It is possible to unlock the reverse version of the three tracks (bringing the track total to six) in the mode. You are against seven opponents in the mode.

Championship: Race on all the tracks in order with a chosen car. You must beat a certain time to qualify for the next track. As in practice, you are against seven opponents.

Link Mode: A multiplayer mode using the PlayStation's link cable functionality, you can race against one other human opponent only (no AI in this mode).

Vehicles

There are four vehicles, all of which are cars except the monster truck. You can also either choose automatic or manual transmission.

Tracks

All three tracks are unlockable in reverse in Practice mode.

External links


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