Monday 17 March 2014

Watch Need for Speed 2014 Online singing on airplane

Watch Need for Speed 2014 Online  reckless driving
Watch Need for Speed 2014 Online Megavideo
Racing titles will always be pride of place in my video games collection. Simulation style racers give the player the thrill of grand day events, matched with luxury, classic and obscure car classes to race around the world in the comfort and safety of your own home. Kart racers are competitive, multiplayer, action-packed and enjoyable at any age with the warmth and appeal to be revisited time and time again. Then, there’s the middle ground; that’s where Need for Speed comes in. The series has come a long way from its roots on the PlayStation 2, Xbox and GameCube. It filled a 90s child’s dream to create ‘boy-racer’ style automobiles for those that weren’t into the likes of Gran Turismo and Forza but wanted more of a challenge and realism factor than Mario Kart or... well, Mario Kart. Players could customise away until they were content with their neon pink, NOS-powered hunks of metal in the Fast and Furious era of racing video games. The games were good, but they soon turned bland and repetitive with each further release. EA continued to make attempts to break new ground in the era, bringing in movie-style plots with fully fledged actors and multi-million-dollar cutscenes, blending in with the action the player creates. In my opinion, it was only until they took the series in a different direction that EA breathed life back into the dying franchise. The acquisition of Criterion Software, creators of the Burnout series, and their initial input in the franchise back in 2010, influenced the move from arcade street-racer to what is today’s NfS - Need for Speed: Rivals. Rivals, as the name would suggest, pits two sets of drivers against each other. It’s a classic good-guy, bad-guy situation where the player can choose which side they are a part of - the Racers or the Cops. Unlike other games where your choice is permanent for the entirety of the playthrough, Rivals allows you to switch between the two at any time by simply driving to the allocated checkpoints within the world and making your choice in the menu that follows. The gameplays out more like an MMO than any other genre of play, although it’s a rather loose one. The world that Rivals is set in is open to explore. The game has an ability to be played online or offline, depending on your internet/subscription status, but when played online players can work together as opposed to a primarily individual experience offline.There’s little in terms of storyline, and no real point to the Racers way of life, other than to just be a total nuisance and get 15 minutes of fame with the videos of their cop takedowns posted online. There’s no characters, apart from the obnoxious and unnecessarily philosophical nature of the Racer's narrator in-between challenges - trying to shoehorn in a plot. The goals of the player, depending on the side you are currently playing, is to take down other Racers or Cops, collect SP (the game’s currency) to upgrade your cars and buy more by completing events and challenging other players or CPUs, taking out other cops or racers or driving to consistent and thrilling standard. The missions you choose as part of each faction vary slightly on how you want to play the game. There are three categories of mission selection for each of the Rivals: Race, Pursuit and Drive for the Racers; and Patrol, Undercover and Enforcer for the Cops. Each mission list takes you on the same narrative storyline (if you can call it that), but if you don’t feel like taking Cops out and want to showcase your driving talents then you’ll choose the Drive set of missions for the Racer. These consist of tasks such as drifting a certain amount or maintaining a top speed for a certain length of time. On the other hand, if you want to be a bad cop, gaining credit for taking out criminals left right and center, then for the Cop faction you’ll want to choose Enforcer. There isn’t a vast difference between each mission-set, but it’s just about enough for you to not get bored with the same type of missions over and over again.

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