Crazy Taxi: Fare Wars

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Crazy Taxi: Fare Wars
Crazy Taxi - Fare Wars Coverart.png
Developer(s) Hitmaker
Sniper Studios
Publisher(s) Sega
Designer(s) Stephen Frost
Platforms PlayStation Portable
Release date(s)
        Genre(s) Racing, Action
        Mode(s) Single-player, multiplayer

        Crazy Taxi: Fare Wars (known as: Crazy Taxi: Double Punch in Japan), is a PSP game, which is a port of both Crazy Taxi and Crazy Taxi 2. There is also a multiplayer aspect which was not available in the games' predecessors, where players compete against one another for customers and fare money. The game was developed by newly created Sniper Studios.

        Gameplay

        Crazy Taxi: Fare Wars combines both Crazy Taxi and Crazy Taxi 2 with new features that allow players to interact with their opponents in brand new ways unseen on other systems. Giving players the ability to play wirelessly with other PSP systems nearby through Ad Hoc or game sharing. Players can ram their opponent's cab to steal their fare or use the new interference feature to make them crash or slow down their fare delivery time.

        Crazy Taxi: Fare Wars gives users the ability to record about 80 seconds of gameplay footage and then transfer it to a computer for media uses. Another feature unseen in previous Crazy Taxi games is the ability to play any MP3 files stores on a memory stick, in the game. Almost all of the sound effects have been re-recorded and are completely different from older versions of Crazy Taxi.

        Differences

        The original game's soundtracks contained songs by the bands Bad Religion and The Offspring has been removed, as well as many of the real-world stores in game, due to licensing issues, though many retain the iconic designs of copyrighted stores (e.g. Pizza Parlor using Pizza Hut's iconic "Red Roof" prior to 1999). However, the game allows custom soundtracks; MP3 files stored on the memory stick can be played in-game.

        Other differences include the aforementioned multiplayer via Ad Hoc wireless, and game sharing, using only one copy of the game, and the ability to record your game footage; about 80 seconds of game footage is recordable and transferable.

        Reception

        Reception
        Aggregate scores
        Aggregator Score
        GameRankings 65.34%[1]
        Metacritic 64/100[2]
        Review scores
        Publication Score
        1UP.com 5.5/10[3]
        Eurogamer 4/10[4]
        Game Informer 5.75/10[5]
        GameSpot 6/10[6]
        GameSpy 4/5 stars[7]
        GamesRadar 3/5 stars[8]
        GameZone 7/10[9]
        IGN 7.5/10[10]
        PALGN 7/10[11]
        VideoGamer.com 5/10[12]
        Maxim 6/10[13]

        The game was met with average to mixed reception upon release; GameRankings gave it a score of 65.34%,[1] while Metacritic gave it 64 out of 100.[2]

        References

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        External links


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