

Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #3090 in Video Games
- Brand: Sony
- Model: 98155
- Published on: 2008-10-29
- Released on: 2008-10-28
- ESRB Rating: Teen
- Number of discs: 1
- Platform: PlayStation 3
- Original language:
English - Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: .50" h x
5.50" w x
7.00" l,
.30 pounds
Features
- The Island - A brand new radically different location for the festival.
- The Monster Truck - An all new vehicle class added to the core vehicle selection for a total of 8 different vehicle classes.
- Immersive Online Experience ¿ A radical re-look at the whole MotorStorm online experience, focusing on ease of use and breadth of gameplay all while tearing it up in races up to 16 players.
- Improved Actions - A new level of control; punch, duck and ram using a new control layout.
- New Rating Systems - It¿s not all about winning; it¿s also about how you perform.
MotorStorm Pacific Rift
Customer Reviews
Most helpful customer reviews
39 of 43 people found the following review helpful.EXCELLENT! much better than the first
By Rey
If you tend to buy the first MotorStorm to get yourself familiar with the game than drop this idea. As good as the original MotorStorm is, it's no comparison to its sequel. MotorStorm: Pacific Rift is a great racing game, but more than just a racing game. The game was improved with even more alternative routes when racing. The graphic is excellent, and the interactions with objects such as smashing into a branch are more accurate. MotorStorm: Pacific Rift is also more realistic such as water cooling off your boost, and smaller vehicles not able to go to certain routes such as deep water.MotorStorm: Pacific Rift has about 80 races, or more. All categorized into four distinct parts of the island: Earth Zone (basic land fields), Air Zone (expect lots of jump lifts), Fire Zone (lava lands), and Water Zone (beach etc). You will find about twenty-four races in each of the four zones. Some are basic races, some timed races, and some eliminator races where racers are being eliminated while racing (you don't want to be in the back).You will also obtain points, and gain PS3 trophies for your performances in the game. Unlike its predecessor you are able to play in split screen with your peers if you have additional controllers. One of the many extras in MotorStorm: Pacific Rift is your ability to take pictures of your race (pause, and snap). The good thing about this feature is that you'll be able to snap a picture on any angle since you'll be able to move, zoom in and out, before snapping your pictures that will all be saved in your gallery. MotorStorm: Pacific Rift also has an improved online gaming where you can text/voice/video chat, and invite your PS3 friends who also own the game.Cons: unfortunately absent in both the first, and Pacific Rift, there are no replays of your race. Hopefully this will be present if they make a third, but this shouldn't be a reason not to buy this game.
23 of 24 people found the following review helpful.Offroad racing at its best
By ice grizzly
When the first motorstorm came out it carved its own racing type. It was one of the pioneers in physics based racing. With every track having lots of branching path, every branch suitable for a different class of vehicles.Here they have taken it to the next level. Races are much bigger. Apart from mud you also have other obstacles for individual vehicles classes. Small vehicles will get stuck in plants and other terrestrial hazards. This time it is lot more than physics. Some people are complaining that vehicles slide more than the first one, it is intentional as it forces you to use hand brakes for a faster drift turn. Overall sense of speed has drastically gone up.This game is still Motorstorm at heart. They have added tonnes and tonnes of extras to the game to make it feel very fresh. Things like lava tracks, water jets for faster cooling, high air jumps all add extra strategy. It is not just driving fast. You have to try out all the alternative paths and choose right one based on boost and cooling requirements.So many behind the scene changes - Explosions will destroy the guys next to you. You can do kamikaze on cliff edges. - If you are small vehicle you can lap behind a big one to clear off the vegetation and pull off at the last second. - Water shower is available only in paths that have more terrestrial danger for balancing. Either it is a rocky path or volcanic eruption. More and more I play, I keep finding lot more interesting tweaks.AI is also vastly improved. If you truly race well you will win. There isn't much of rubber necking. I also think the physics respond much better compared to the first one. Jumps and slides feel lot more natural. Graphics seem to be better than the demo. I think they have tweaked the xdr lighting. Every thing looks very polished. I havent seen any crashes or hangs.There is twice as many race tracks as the original one. There is also an extra eliminator mode. Speed events are my favorite, it is like slalom race. Where the flags appear only after you cross the current one. So it requires lot more agility than just boosting the way through. It is like the old ATV games.After play thing for an hour or so, when I tried MS1 it was a night and day difference. The new game also loads much much faster than the old one. The vehicle selection screen is lot more slicker and avoids the double loading screen. I love the fact they have added split screen. There is nothing more fun than pushing your buddy off the cliff. Using L1/R1 as action buttons makes the game much more fun.Hope they keep us busy with more DLCs.
9 of 10 people found the following review helpful.Beats the original in every way.
By James K. R. Mckee
I couldn't wait to buy this game. Every trailer seemed better and better.I played the original and wasn't too impressed: There was nothing done to incur a sense of speed in the original, and there was no split screen multiplayer. The crashes were the highlight, however.Pacific Rift fixes both of those problems completely. They've increased the sense of speed by adding more effects and a fish-eye lens, and its a significant improvement. This time around there is split screen multiplayer for up to four players. Two would have satisfied me...Another huge improvement are the environments. They are gorgeous, probably some of the best looking I've seen to date. You'll drive underneath waterfalls from a mile high that cover the screen in water affects and obstruct your vision, but cool of your engine, you'll jet through forests at incredible speeds, slog through valleys of mud, and pass over pits of lava on an active volcano. The environments are categorized as follows: Earth, Air, Fire, Water. The earth environments tend to place you in caverns mud, and thick forests; air tend to place you high up in the mountains where you'll get up to seven or eight seconds of airtime through unbelievable cliffs; fire will take you over active volcano landscapes that heat up your engine as a hazard; while water environments tend to place you near a beach or running rivers. Just look at the screen shots for the unbelievable scenery.The crashes are as phenomenal as ever. In one race I played a lightweight rally car, and the last fifteen cars were either monster trucks or heavyweight mudpluggers (hummers/armored personnel carriers). The monster trucks would fight one another, and form swirling masses of destruction if they toppled over, and made for some amazing survival drive sequences. There are other races, such as bike-only races, where drivers flip each other off, taunt each other, and hit one another off of their bikes. There are so many ways to enjoy the game. If you get bored of playing a rally car and trying to speed as fast as you can, you can switch to big rig and just run people over or smash them into things. If you get bored of that, you can be a motorcycle against only monster trucks and try to survive... its up to you.The farther you get in the singleplayer, the tougher the AI becomes. Toward the end, I found it more important to stay alive than to actually win the race, an example being the monster trucks above. The Ai will become more aggressive and smash into you. While it is at times frustrating, their aggression causes even more crashes and spontaneity.There are eight or so difficulty levels in the singleplayer, and winning races within specified requirements earns you points and new vehicles, driver skins, and extras (such as concept art). In a singleplayer race, there are sixteen cars instead of twelve. Online mode only supports twelve though.Online is fantastic. Online mode places you into games with other players of similar skills, or at least tries. When first starting, I found the races to be the easiest because I already completed the singleplayer before hand. There are five or so online player ranks, and the later ranks require you to place within the top three positions if you want to increase at all, so it becomes extremely difficult. At veteran difficulty, you'll actually lose ranking points if you don't place high enough, so it places every racer into their own category, which I thought was interesting and intuitive.The replay value is very high. There's a custom game mode where you can set the cars, tracks, and time of day for yourself... something that should have been included in the original.Out of ten points, I give MotorStorm: Pacific Rift a 9.5... the original being a 7.5 due to one type of environment, lack of speed and multiplayer options. Pacific rift fixes all of these problems, and I highly recommend you buy it if you own a PS3.
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