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Back of Case - Playstation 2 (U.S.):
FIGHT TO THE TOP
EXCLUSIVE GAME OF NASCAR
NEXT GENERATION GRUDGES AND ALLIANCES
NON-STOP ACTION IN EVERY SERIES
INTIMIDATE YOUR RIVALS
EARN NEW RIDES WITH SKILL POINTS
FEATURES
- NEW FIGHT TO THE TOP MODE
Develop your driver and fight for the ultimate championship by simultaneously dominating different racing series, managing race teams, and earning new rides and sponsorships.
- THE FIELD EXPANDS
The NASCAR Featherlite Modified Series, NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, NASCAR Busch Series, and American Muscle cars join the circuit.
- NEW CHASE FOR THE CUP MODE
Make your own late season drama in the only game featuring the new championship points system.
- BE A HERO OR A VILLAIN
Force mistakes with the new Intimidator Control, but be prepared to deal with the consequences after the race.
- ENHANCED EA SPORTS™ ONLINE*
Join the largest sports gaming community featuring all-new four player racing where you take on a full field of cars in ever series.
Contributed by Big John WV (23427) on Mar 15, 2009.
www.nintendo.com – Nintendo GameCube:
Show 'em what you've got.The sweetest NASCAR ride yet.
Features
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Expanded career mode
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Four racing series, including Craftsman Truck series
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Steer your driver toward being a hero or villain
To add more drama to the season's final races, NASCAR changed the point
system in 2004. Now the drivers in the top 10 in the Nextel Cup points
standings (and any racer within 400 points) with 10 races to go square off
in the remaining races to determine the Nextel Cup champion.
EA
Sports used that to their advantage, creating a whole new game mode based
solely on those last 10 races. This feature, however, is just a drop in
the bucket compared to how insanely deep this game is.
Fight To
The Top
The game's main feature, Fight To The Top, plays out
like a story mode. You start out as a rookie driver in the NASCAR
Featherlite Modified series. With success, teams and sponsors will
contract your agent about getting you to drive their cars and trucks.
You don't have to take the first job that's offered to you. Once you sign on,
though, you'll more money and a bigger percentage of the merchandise as
you climb the ladder. Once you have enough funds, you can buy a team of
your own. A Featherlite team sets you back $175,000 while a Nextel racer
runs $4 million. It's an investment worth making.
The method with
which you choose to race has an effect on how good or bad you are. DUH,
right? Not quite. If you race cautiously and professionally, you gain hero
points. If you cut people off and run their cars into the wall, you earn
villain points and lots of rivals on the racing circuit. Regardless of
which path you take, being an extreme hero or villain sells. As you make
your mark, you'll earn the respect of more fans. They'll either love to
love you or love to hate you. Either way, it puts money in your pocket.
If you're a villain, drivers are less willing to help you out in tight races.
The hero garners more respect on the track. It's much easier to become the
villain than the hero, but once your driving skills tighten up, you can
turn over a new leaf. Being a villain does have its perks. When you're
directly behind a driver, you can push the B Button to try to intimidate
them into getting out of the way. On the other end, you can share your
draft during a race with others to build alliances. When the Share Draft
meter fills up, press the A Button and make a friend (for a while).
In the Fight To The Top menu, go to Game Status to check out your driver's
prestige level and rank in the fans' eyes. You don't have to race in every
race. Take a look at the racing calendar and skip any of the events you
wish. Of course, you don't win money or earn points if you don't race.
Racing in charity events will score you big hero points. Additionally, you
can drive cars in more than one series in a calendar year. However, if you
own a car in a series, you can't accept contracts from other teams.
Race Modes
If you don't want to make a career out of NASCAR 2005,
play one of the five different race modes. With most of these game modes,
you set difficulty and race length options before you put the pedal to the
metal.
Two of the modes, Dodge Speedzone and Lightning Challenge,
set up scenarios for you to complete. If you just want to get in the car
and go, the Race Now mode is for you. In Race Now, tweak everything from
series and players (one or two) to difficulty and race length (from 4
percent to 100 percent of the original race).
For multi-race
gameplay, set up a Season or participate in the Chase For The Cup. With
the Chase For The Cup, you select where you stand in the top 10 heading
into the last 10 races. Then select other game options. Once the
parameters are set, select your NASCAR driver and the nine other drivers
who will battle you in the sprint to the finish. The AI can also select
the opponents at random. Other sports games have a playoff mode, now
NASCAR has its way of settling things among the best.
Intelligent Driving
NASCAR 2005: Chase for the Cup has a little
something for every racing fan. For the hard-core NASCAR disciples, the
Extreme difficulty setting sets the CPU drivers AI to "legend," forces you
to make all pit stops, breaks out the yellow flag during accidents and
comes down hard on you for damaging your car.
Not into
micromanaging your racing? NASCAR 2005 includes difficulty settings that
will assist your driving, let you skip the pits and makes repairing damage
as easy as pressing the L Button. It's easy to find some aspect of the
game to challenge your ability. Plus, the new hero/villain scale brings
some entertainment to the gear-head masses. If you cross a driver during
the race, look out. He might come after you in the pits after the race.
Don't expect Jeff Gordon to take a swing at Rusty Wallace or Dale
Earnhardt Jr. performing a finishing move on Kevin Harvick. But, it's fun
to see them squabble after a race.
Bottom Line
It's
more NASCAR than you bargained for (and we didn't even touch on managing
your own race team), but don't let the wealth of options intimidate you.
Even casual racing fans should pick this game up.
Contributed by Evil Ryu (31675) on Aug 13, 2005.
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