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Monster Truck Madness
 
 

Monster Truck Madness

by Rockstar Games
Nintendo 64 Everyone
3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)

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Product Features

  • n64

Product Details

  • Shipping: This item is also available for shipping to select countries outside the U.S.
  • ASIN: B00001ZWQI
  • Media: Game Cartridge
  • Release Date: July 30, 1999
  • Average Customer Review: 3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #16,261 in Video Games (See Top 100 in Video Games)

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Product Description

GameSpot Review

Playing Monster Truck Madness 64 is like driving a lemon: You really want to get somewhere with it, but something's sure to break down along the way. After checking under this game's hood, it's easy to pinpoint the problems: frustrating control, questionable gameplay, and subpar graphics and features. Despite some fairly creative extras, this title screams for six more months in the tune-up shop before hitting the streets. Monster Truck Madness is essentially an arcade off-road racing game. However, instead of rally cars, the game employs 20 huge trucks with balloon tires. The trucks compete on fictional tracks littered with weapons to pick up, such as oil slicks and missiles. Placing first on a track unlocks additional tracks (up to ten total, depending on the difficulty level). The tracks are designed with plenty of jumps and hills, which makes for some fairly rough-and-tumble racing.

At least, that's what you would expect - until you pick up the controller. For those who've enjoyed off-road arcade racers such as Sega Rally Championship, this game hardly measures up to those standards. A key factor in off-road games is the ability to powerslide: After braking into a turn to point sideways, you can feather the acceleration button to keep your speed as you slide through. One would figure that with heavier trucks and bigger tires, this would be possible to some extent. Sadly, the game's control can't mimic that "feel" accurately. When you brake into a turn to initiate a powerslide, the truck stops abruptly rather than sliding in the mud - it won't carry your momentum. However, if you merely try to turn early and feather the acceleration through a turn, the truck becomes an ice skate and you overshoot the turn. The physics between the two scenarios don't match up - stop on mud one way, but slide the other - which makes powersliding difficult. Instead, you wind up driving slowly through turns, which lets computer trucks catch up.

Compounding that control problem is questionable gameplay. When trucks jostle for position, it's easy to get caught sideways. That's the kiss of death, because a broadside collision can send you literally flying off the track. However, the same doesn't apply to computer trucks: They merely block you from moving ahead. In addition, when collisions cause your truck to tip over, the animation occurs in excruciatingly slow motion, which gives extra time for computer trucks to rush ahead. The same goes if you run down a slope, as the truck tips over at the same slow-motion speed whether you hit it at five or 50 miles per hour. The game doesn't even have the decency to face you forward again after a flip - you have to do it yourself. Plus, the computer seems to relish nudging you into obstacles that stop trucks dead in their tracks, such as pillars or checkpoints, which can easily knock you out of contention.

Presumably, the power-ups are the key to even the odds stacked against you. Problem is, half the power-ups help opponents more than they hurt them. Turbos and superjump power-ups often send you off track or force you to flip over. A force-field power-up, intended to knock players off track, often sends them flying ahead of you rather than off to the side. Since you must race flawlessly to finish first (at the normal difficulty), one mistake means you're better off restarting the race than trying to finish - that gets lame very quickly.

Graphically, the game sports first-generation textures and graphics, which look drab and plain by today's standards - at least the game adds nice touches when it comes to weather effects, such as fog or snow. What hurts the game's looks more than the graphics is the game's speed. The speedometer may read 100-plus miles per hour, but the trucks move as if grannies are behind the wheels, so there's no "rush" because the trucks seem to move so slow. As for the sound, a grating announcer serves up inane, smart-ass comments that make you glad he can be turned off - and wish he could be run over by a truck. The background rock music and effects aren't anything special, either.

The laundry list of complaints continues with one sorely missing feature: no memory card support. Instead, you must type out tedious 8- to 17-character sequences that must be reentered every time you quit a game.

To its credit, the game sports some decent innovations. First off, the tracks are free roaming, so a truck can go off course any time to find a shortcut or a power-up. Second, the trucks in the game are based on famous real-life vehicles, such as Big Foot and Grave Digger - but despite this variety, all trucks seem to handle the same for the most part. Finally, the game has some fairly interesting multiplayer minigames, such as hockey, soccer, and a monster-truck variant of king of the hill. Unfortunately, one has to accept the game's control and gameplay flaws to enjoy them.

When one adds it all up, Monster Truck Madness winds up as barely playable and hardly fun. Gamers itchin' for a monster-truck fix should save their cash until the real thing rolls into town. --Nelson Taruc
--Copyright ©1999 GameSpot Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of GameSpot is prohibited. GameSpot and the GameSpot logo are trademarks of GameSpot Inc.

Product Description

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Customer Reviews

15 Reviews
5 star:
 (3)
4 star:
 (7)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:
 (3)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.4 out of 5 stars (15 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Some truck-crushing fun, October 6, 2000
By 
jasenao (Dothan, Alabama, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Monster Truck Madness (Game Cartridge)
"Monster Truck Madness" is a pretty good game. When I first played it, I thought that it had some of the worst control out of any video game I've ever played. However, after I played it more, I got used to the control and it wasn't too bad. The game has a lot of options of play, which is what makes "Monster Truck Madness" a good game. You can choose many of your favorite monster trucks such as Bigfoot, Snakebite, Grave Digger, and many others. You can play up to four players at the same time in tournament mode or battle mode. The battle mode is the best part of the game in my opinion. You can play soccer, hockey, a summit level where you try to stay on top of an NWO sign the longest, a chase mode, and a tag mode. To give the game better replay value, there are a lot of secrets and codes that you can use in the game to get hidden tracks, make your trucks have huge tires, etc.

I recommend anybody who has a Nintendo 64 to at least rent "Monster Truck Madness." When you first play it, you might scoff at how bad the controls are or how easy you get tipped over, but after you play it awhile, you should get used to it. The only real bad thing about the game is that it doesn't tell you when you're going the wrong way.

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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Take2, You Disappoint Me, March 27, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Monster Truck Madness (Game Cartridge)
The game has a good feature when it comes to the battle games, but it is missing one crusial thing that makes the monster trucks what they are: car crushing. If that is missing, than the absolute highest I'll give it is 3 stars, and I gave it that because it is fun to rolol over the truck and bang your opponent silly. Overall, OK, But too much is left out.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Not the best, but it is deffinatly fun, January 14, 2000
By A Customer
= Durability:5.0 out of 5 stars  = Fun:4.0 out of 5 stars  = Educational:5.0 out of 5 stars 
This review is from: Monster Truck Madness (Game Cartridge)
I have had this game for about 3 weeks now, and I still enjoy playing it. As far as the graphics go, it's nothing special(the graphics are as good as the 64 games usually are). And as far as intrest, It has a lot more to it than just the usual racing. It also has a hockey and soccer game, ram the puck(a giant wheel) or soccer ball into the goal; tag, the title says it all(with the exception of the idea that the truck that is "it" is turned into a 5 ton chicken on wheels); chase, one truck is a normal monster truck and the others(1-3 other players) are police trucks; sumit rumble, a lot like a monster truck version of "king of the hill" that can be played against up to 3 other trucks(other players and/or computer-controled opponents); exhibition, you can choose from most of the differant tracks in the game to race by yourself, against computer opponents, and/or against other players; and circut, you go through about 10 differant tracks(very easy to practically imposible), you have to win first place on a track before you can go to the next track. You can choose from 19 differant trucks. I like the game, but I give this info for you to use to help you decide before you buy.
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