Need For Speed: Most Wanted Message Board older than one year ago

Sign-in to post

Posted by Kotaku Jan 17 2013 17:15 GMT
- Like?
#wiiu Here's a feature for the March 19 Wii U version of last fall's acclaimed racing game Need for Speed Most Wanted that wasn't in the Xbox 360, PS3 and PC versions. From an EA press release: More »

Posted by IGN Dec 18 2012 22:44 GMT
- Like?
Five of the world's fastest exotic cars are headed to Need for Speed Most Wanted.

Posted by GoNintendo Dec 13 2012 18:45 GMT
- Like?


FutureShop currently has Need for Speed: Most Wanted hitting Wii U on March 12th, 2013. We'll have to wait for EA to give an official comment on this one.

Posted by PlayStation Blog Nov 13 2012 20:00 GMT
- Like?

Need for Speed Most Wanted is now out, and today we’re celebrating 1 million Autolog users with the release of the PlayStation 3 demo. We’re bringing PlayStation.Blog the inside track on what new players should look for, and how to dominate the Most Wanted demo.

8182954286_e8b096d094_z.jpg

Making a demo for a large-scale open world game is a major challenge. We wanted to put together a snapshot of Most Wanted’s blend of exploration, connected competition and explosive, over-the-top police chase action to give you a taste of what to expect from the main game.

The action takes place in a locked down version of the city – you get to play in Fairhaven’s Downtown and Four Bridges districts. These areas are loaded with billboards, jumps, speed cameras and hidden cars.

The game kicks you off in Aston Martin’s beautiful V12 Vantage. Race to the first location, and we’ll bust out the classic Porsche 911 Carrera S.

8182915463_0148d6e608_n.jpg8182954058_96f61f4945_n.jpg

Explore the city further, and you’ll find a “Jack Spot” with Audi’s flagship R8 Spyder. Park and hit triangle to instantly switch. It’s as easy as that. In the main game, it’s the same deal but on a grand scale. There are over a hundred Jack Spots to locate and discover cars.

Add a friend to Autolog, and we’ll bust out the final car of the demo, the fan-favorite Ford Focus RS500. And you definitely want to do this. Not only because the RS500 is a truly pimp car, but because just like the full game, our demo is all about Autolog.

Most Wanted is all about Speed Points. Everything you do in the game earns them — from online multiplayer, to escaping the cops, to cruising the city looking for cars and records to beat. Earn more than your friends to reach the top of your Most Wanted List.

8182953966_033d94f409_z.jpg

Here are five easy tips for you guys to make racking up the maximum 50,000 demo Speed Points a breeze.

  • Most Wanted is an open world game. When racing, keep an eye on the mini map in the bottom left of the screen to avoid missing crucial turns.
  • Look out for gas stations. Drive through these to clean, repair and respray your car. If you’re taking a beating during a race or cop pursuit, these can make all the difference between first and last place, or escape and arrest.
  • Win the “Keys to the City” event to unlock the Burn Nitrous modification. Equip it and then fill your nitrous gauge by driving against the flow, hitting jumps or taking down your opponents.
  • The end of the second event finishes at a gas station. Behind it, you’ll find the R8 Spyder. It’s all-wheel-drive with a strong rear-wheel bias. Its planted, manageable handling combines beautifully with the AWD to give a little extra off road performance. Perfect for shaking the cops or hitting those billboards with a dirt run-up.
  • With the cops on your tail, get out of sight and hit L3 to switch off the engine. You’ll enter Cool Down and reduce your Wanted gauge fast.

Posted by Kotaku Nov 10 2012 01:00 GMT
- Like?
#bestofmetacritic Welcome back to "Backhanded Box Quotes," a collection of measured, thoughtful criticism from the user reviews of Metacritic and elsewhere. More »

Posted by IGN Oct 30 2012 18:07 GMT
- Like?
IGN takes you through Criterion's 2012 Need for Speed Most Wanted. Get to the Chopper speed run with the Ford F-150

Posted by IGN Oct 30 2012 18:06 GMT
- Like?
IGN takes you through Criterion's 2012 Need for Speed Most Wanted. Sport Sprint race with the Pagani Huayra.

Posted by IGN Oct 30 2012 18:05 GMT
- Like?
IGN takes you through Criterion's 2012 Need for Speed Most Wanted. Pumping Iron race with the Caterham Superlight R500.

Posted by IGN Oct 30 2012 18:05 GMT
- Like?
IGN takes you through Criterion's 2012 Need for Speed Most Wanted. Straight to the Point race with the Caterham Superlight R500.

Posted by IGN Oct 30 2012 14:21 GMT
- Like?
Criterion returns to the Need For Speed franchise. Has it been worth the wait?

Posted by Giant Bomb Oct 30 2012 13:00 GMT
- Like?
The cops are probably the least interesting part about Most Wanted.

Need for Speed: Most Wanted might not have the name on the box, but it's essentially a mini-sequel to Burnout Paradise. Criterion has taken a lot of the ideas from its last big open-world racing game and sharpened them up a bit. As the type of person who put hundreds of hours into Burnout Paradise, I find this to be a very exciting prospect, indeed. While the ideas behind Most Wanted are mostly sound, sometimes the execution of its solo gameplay is decidedly less so. Yet the multiplayer side takes all those learnings from Burnout Paradise and runs with them in some incredible ways. The end result is a game with some amazing moments and enough little issues to make you constantly wish that it was slightly better, slightly smoother, and (on consoles) slightly cleaner.

But let's start with what Most Wanted actually is. It's an open world racing game with a single-player mode that is very different from its multiplayer, but they're united by a shared player progression. In single-player mode, the object is to take on the 10 cars that make up the "Most Wanted List." In order to unlock those 10 races, you'll need to earn experience points, which are gained in other races. With the exception of the "Most Wanted" cars themselves, no vehicles are doled out to you as you progress. Instead, every car is tucked away in a few spots around the world. These "jack spots" let you drive up to these parked cars and press a button to switch. Each car has five races assigned to it, and completing these earn you experience points and unlock car modifiers, like off-road tires that help you maintain control when you're not on the streets, or a reinforced chassis that lets you maintain control after a collision with another racer or cop. That's not to say that there are five unique races for every car, though, as plenty of them repeat. But the unlocks are car-specific, so if you're bent on doing everything you'll need to find every car and complete all five races with every car.

Putting the aero body on your car lets you catch more air, useful for taking some high scores.

The cars themselves handle well in a loose, fun way that feels a lot like Burnout Paradise. Tapping the brakes sets your car adrift, letting you get long, smooth slides around sharp corners, often while simultaneously using your nitrous boost to actually gain speed while sliding out. The fastest cars require tight turning abilities and even tighter reaction times from the player to help dodge oncoming traffic, highway dividers, and the like. Once you get used to its specific style of driving, it's positively excellent.

While the bulk of the single-player events are only open to a few cars, the Most Wanted races themselves are open to any vehicle, and you can use a handy in-game menu to change cars or mods at any time. But, for whatever reason, changing cars doesn't let you change cars on the spot. You can only warp to one of the areas where that car is parked. So changing cars on the fly isn't really an option, which is annoying in cases where you want to switch to a faster car because you just found a billboard, speed camera, or some other optional piece of the world that you want to blast through.

The name Most Wanted also implies that the police will be involved, and sure enough, they'll pop up with increasing frequency as you work your way through the game. Some events simply have police encounters programmed into them, forcing you to deal with the law as you race and escape them once the race is complete. You can also get into free-drive scuffles with the law if they see you driving fast... which happens all the time. The police aspect of Most Wanted feels tossed in and largely out of place, especially when you're just trying to bang out some races and unlock mods for your current car. You can't start race events or warp to other cars while a pursuit is in progress. While you can typically speed away from a pursuit just as it's started and get away without much trouble, if you get mired in a longer chase that started during a previous event, the fastest way out is usually to just let yourself get caught. There's no penalty for that--in fact there are in-game milestones built upon getting busted--though the game forcibly warps you back to your current car's parking spot once that happens. If you're right near the next event or trying to hunt down collectibles, this is pretty much just a pain in the ass.

Ultimately, though, the real issue with the single-player is that it feels a little empty. The world feels small and lifeless. Aside from an announcer coming on and giving a speech that is deliberately similar to the one found in Burnout Paradise when you first start playing, the only other chatter you hear comes during police chases. But the police radio dialogue is almost immediately repetitive, adding the tedium I felt whenever the law got involved. On top of that, it isn't particularly long or in-depth, so unless you're bent on upgrading every car, you'll reach a million experience points and be able to complete the final Most Wanted race in around six or seven hours.

Though you'll see plenty of cops during some pursuits, it never turns into the Blues Brothers or anything like that.

Thankfully, the game has multiplayer, and the online side of Need for Speed: Most Wanted is amazing. Rather than just dump you into yet another series of races, Most Wanted is more like the challenge modes found in Burnout Paradise with some proper racing mixed in. The events join together to form "speedlists," which group five different events together. These are served up at random in public matches, but you can configure your own lists for private matches. The events vary from group activities, like asking all the players to perform drifts around a landmark until the total drift yardage reaches a certain number. Or individual feats of skill, like seeing who can get the longest jump off of a specific ramp. But these have a twist. If you're taken out by another player while trying to hit that longest jump, your last score is frozen and you're effectively eliminated from the event, leaving you to just try to screw it up for the other players by taking them out. So it's a viable strategy to get a good, long jump and then just park on the ramp to mess up other players. It's dirty.

Even the racing has a wicked, filthy edge to it. Between events, you're asked to drive to the next meet up spot so that all players are in the same basic location when the next event starts. When that event is a race, it doesn't line you all up into some sort of formal starting grid. As soon as the GPS line appears on your map and you know which direction you're supposed to take, you're free to start moving in the basic direction of the first checkpoint, timer be damned. Even the drive to the meet up point has a bit of competition to it, as the player that gets there first gets a little bit of XP. At the end of the five-event group, the scores are tallied, a winner is declared, and you're ready for the next set.

Though the pool of experience points you earn is used across multiplayer and the solo portion of Most Wanted, the two sides of the game handle unlocks completely differently. Rather than finding cars in the world, in multiplayer you unlock more cars when you gain a level, and mods for those cars are earned by driving and performing well in those specific vehicles. So you might earn track tires for driving a car for five miles or an aero body kit for jumping a set number of yards. "Pro" versions of these perks are also unlockable later on. And since the game uses the same XP count for both modes, playing online is a good way to unlock the Most Wanted races in single-player, and if you've been playing a bunch of single-player, you'll have a bunch of new cars to choose from the next time you get in a game with other people.

No front plate, but your rear license plate is customizable like a Call of Duty playercard.

The Xbox 360 version of the game is a little hitchy, with an unstable frame rate that takes supreme dives whenever there are a lot of cop cars on-screen. It also looks a little blurry at the horizon, which in a game where dodging oncoming traffic at insane speeds is the order of the day can cause some issues of its own. The PC version, predictably, has none of these issues. It looks great at high resolutions and, assuming you've got a machine that can handle it, the frame rate is terrific. Ultimately, though, this is a multiplayer game that you'll enjoy most with friends, and you should probably play it where your friends will play it... just try to convince them all that the PC version is the way to go, if you hold that sort of sway over your peers.

It's also worth noting that Most Wanted might be the first game I've seen that justifies the existence of EA's Origin service, as it syncs your point total across all platforms, including the Vita version. This means that if you finish the game on one platform, you'll have enough points to immediately open the main races in single-player on another platform, but more importantly your multiplayer progress will carry over. I don't know that I'd recommend that people play the game on multiple platforms, but if you're planning on playing the portable version as well as its "big" counterpart, it's pretty cool to not have to unlock all those cars in both places.

It's a shame that the single-player portion of Most Wanted isn't more exciting, but it's still pretty good because the handling makes the cars enjoyable to just drive around, regardless of what you're doing. But if you're looking for a solid, lengthy solo campaign from a driving game, this isn't what you're looking for. Most Wanted is a multiplayer-first game, and taken in that context, few games do it better than this.


YouTube
Posted by Giant Bomb Oct 30 2012 13:00 GMT
- Like?
If this is as close as we're going to get to another Burnout Paradise, Jeff and Brad are cool with that.

Posted by IGN Oct 30 2012 07:00 GMT
- Like?
IGN takes you through Criterion's 2012 Need for Speed Most Wanted. Sprint Eastward race with the Chevrolet Camero ZR1.

Posted by IGN Oct 30 2012 07:00 GMT
- Like?
IGN shows you how to pull an old Switcheroo for that achievement or Trophy in Need for Speed Most Wanted.

Posted by IGN Oct 30 2012 07:00 GMT
- Like?
IGN takes you through Criterion's 2012 Need for Speed Most Wanted. Car Location, Bentley Supersports ISR.

Posted by IGN Oct 30 2012 07:00 GMT
- Like?
IGN takes you through Criterion's 2012 Need for Speed Most Wanted. Top Ten Most Wanted #5 Porsche 918 Spyder Concept.

Posted by IGN Oct 30 2012 07:00 GMT
- Like?
IGN take you through Criterion's 2012 Need For Speed Most Wanted. Porsche 911 Turbo 3.0 Car Location.

Posted by IGN Oct 30 2012 07:00 GMT
- Like?
IGN takes you through 2012s Need For Speed Most Wanted. Park and Country race with Maserati GT MC Stardale.

Posted by IGN Oct 30 2012 07:00 GMT
- Like?
IGN take you through Criterion's 2012 Need For Speed Most Wanted.Maserati GT MC Stardale Car Location.

Posted by IGN Oct 30 2012 07:00 GMT
- Like?
IGN shows you how to obtain the achievement/trophy, Kitchen Sink, in Need for Speed Most Wanted.

Posted by IGN Oct 30 2012 07:00 GMT
- Like?
IGN takes you through Criterion's 2012 Need for Speed Most Wanted. Top 10 most Wanted #6.

Posted by IGN Oct 30 2012 07:00 GMT
- Like?
IGN takes you through Criterion's 2012 Need For Speed Most Wanted. For Mustang Boss 302 Car Location.

Posted by IGN Oct 30 2012 07:00 GMT
- Like?
IGN take you through Criterion's 2012 Need For Speed Most Wanted. Ford Focus RS500 Car Location.

Posted by IGN Oct 30 2012 07:00 GMT
- Like?
IGN takes you through Criterion's 2012 Need for Speed Most Wanted. Sports Sprints race with the BAC Mono.

Posted by IGN Oct 30 2012 07:00 GMT
- Like?
IGN takes you through Criterion's 2012 Need For Speed Most Wanted. Keys to the City race with Porcsche 911 Carerra S.

Posted by IGN Oct 30 2012 07:00 GMT
- Like?
IGN takes you through 2012s Need For Speed Most Wanted. Cold Burn race with Porsche 911 Carerra S.

Posted by IGN Oct 30 2012 07:00 GMT
- Like?
IGN take you through Criterion's 2012 Need For Speed Most Wanted. Bentley Supersports ISR Car Location.

Posted by IGN Oct 30 2012 07:00 GMT
- Like?
IGN takes you through 2012s Need For Speed Most Wanted. Emmerson Beltway race with Maserati GT MC Stardale.

Posted by IGN Oct 30 2012 07:00 GMT
- Like?
IGN takes you through Criterion's 2012 Need for Speed Most Wanted. Car Location, Range Rover

Posted by IGN Oct 30 2012 07:00 GMT
- Like?
IGN takes you through 2012s Need For Speed Most Wanted. Blood Nose Pursuit Evasion with Maserati GT MC Stardale.