The Star Malaysia - Star2

Planes, boats and automobile­s

Take to the land, sea and skies in TheCrew2 which recreates America beautifull­y.

- By GIESON CACHO

EVERYTHING is bigger in America. The cars and the fast-food come supersized. Its mountain ranges dwarf the peaks of most countries. The lakes are great and the canyons are grand.

So when making an open-world racing game that lets players freely roam the United States, expectatio­ns were high. With The Crew,

Ivory Tower and Ubisoft succeeded in creating an approximat­e replica of the country. It is an abridged America but one that still retained several sprawling cities, varied coastlines and distinct regions. The problem is that while The

Crew reflected the vastness of America, it was a game that felt bland, empty and lifeless.

By recreating the size of the US, the original created a world that was impressive­ly huge but boring to explore. The Crew 2 fixes that major flaw by opening up the project’s main concept beyond racing.

Not limited to land

The Crew 2 is a different animal and that leaps out at players from the start as they jump from different modes of transporta­tion. The game shifts from driving on land to boating at sea to flying around the Manhattan skyline.

While the original felt limited on the ground, the move to venturing on sea and air gives the game unrivalled freedom and opportunit­ies for exploratio­n. Players can seamlessly switch from driving to boating to flying as they cross the huge map. By plane, it took me nearly 30 minutes to go coast to coast.

It makes getting around America much more compelling as players either speed to different headquarte­rs or events around the country, or even fly there. For those who just want to tackle events, they can go to the activities menu and pick from several options.

The change in approach even extends to the story. The Crew 2 veers away from the Fast And

Furious style narrative and takes a slant similar to the Forza Horizon franchise.

It has a festival vibe as players compete in five different categories of events: street racing, off-road, freestyle, pro racing and the Live Xtreme Series.

Within each category are several discipline­s centred on a type of vehicle. Street racing has discipline­s focused on drifting and drag racing while off-road features motocross and rally cars.

Freestyle includes aerial acrobats via stunt planes and monster truck arenas, while pro racing focuses on F1-type vehicles and powerboats.

Lastly, the Live Xtreme Series are long races that put discipline­s together, forcing players to switch between different forms and styles of transporta­tion.

Something for everyone

Although the variety is enticing, The Crew 2’s gameplay doesn’t particular­ly stand out but Ivory Tower does a serviceabl­e job of making players feel as though they’re drifting for points or following the right line around a race track.

The developers create gameplay wrinkles that require competitor­s to learn techniques. For boating, players can pull the left stick back to gain speed at the cost of control. It’s a different element from the nitro boost that all vehicles have. For cars and motorcycle­s, there’s a handbrake that lets players negotiate 90° and hairpin turns. Flying has an extreme mode that makes aircraft control more sensitive so that players can pull off more hair-raising stunts.

Couple the broad array of vehicles with inventive race tracks, events and missions and there’s a lot to love about The Crew 2.

Because it caters to so many tastes, players will find something they’ll love or they’ll be exposed to types of racing they never realised they liked. For players who don’t want to compete and just want to explore, they’ll find a good photo mode with missions designed to reward those who venture off the beaten path.

Like the original, The Crew 2 has a day-night cycle so races and events can occur during afternoon and twilight, which presents players new challenges. In flights, performing loops and barrel rolls in darkness is more difficult without a clear view of the horizon.

What’s more interestin­g, though, is dynamic weather that changes racing conditions making roads slippery.

End game

Unfortunat­ely, the weather isn’t realistic. If one part of the map has snow, the rest of the map is a winter wonderland, which doesn’t often happen in places such as Miami. This throws off the immersion of the game. The other two issues with the game is that the story mode isn’t that compelling. The Crew 2 does have surprising moments during races but players shouldn’t expect to find friends or villains worth caring about.

The other problem is that race navigation is confusing. Some races, especially the longer ones, are so sprawling that it’s easy to miss a turn or go off the track. So you will have to resort to trial and error when learning events.

But that shouldn’t diminish The Crew 2 too much. Ivory Tower finally matches the games epic scope with content that takes advantage of the diversity and breadth of the great American landscape. — The Mercury News/ Tribune News Service

 ??  ?? THE CREW 2 Action game for PS4, PC (Ivory Tower/Ubisoft) PRICE: RM210 (PSN); RM209 (Steam)
THE CREW 2 Action game for PS4, PC (Ivory Tower/Ubisoft) PRICE: RM210 (PSN); RM209 (Steam)
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