
This will be either in the form of direct download or PC. It may be easy, but it's good clean fun too. All shops featured on GG.deals will deliver your game immediately after the payment has been approved. If you were part of the original Hot Wheels toy revolution, you'll enjoy playing with 15 cars from the authentic Highway 35 anniversary collection. The tracks offer bags of fun, with loop-the-loops, head-spinning inverted sections and plentiful short cuts. Simply pick up rings to fill the nitro boost meter, then use the turbo to make impossible stunt jumps through space. The catch-up system favours the stragglers at the back, so it definitely won't appeal to Grand Prix 4 buffs who pore over postrace aerodynamics data. Hurrah! Let's all group-hug DX9 and its pixel-trickery, and banish for ever those turd nlike browns and greens we've suffered for so many years.Īdmittedly, the game is aimed at a young audience, and as such, it's all too easy to win. Incandescent reds, greens and blues emanate from the screen, lending a Wipeout/F-Zero-like feel to the 15-plus futuristic courses. At last, something to get that GeForceFX sweating.Īnd what a celebration of colour and light this is. Like Lego before it, the 35-year-old Hot Wheels franchise has had to adapt to changes in the toy market and 'go digital' in recent times, unashamedly rebranding the classic Micro Machines as its own for an opening assault on the PC market.Ĭarefully avoiding cliches about this latest offering being another kids' game (a common excuse for plain crap games), we were actually thrilled to see Climax (yes, the same Climax behind the solid MotoGP) offering support for DX9 special effects.
