Street Racing Syndicate is a multiplatform racing video game produced by Eutechnyx, and released by Namco on August 31, 2004 for the PlayStation 2, GameCube, Xbox and Windows-based personal computers. The game was also released for the Game Boy Advance on October 4, 2005. During its release, it was meant to compete against Need For Speed: Underground 2, the sequel to the critically acclaimed first game released in 2003.
2004 video game
Street Racing Syndicate
Developer(s)
Eutechnyx
Publisher(s)
Namco Codemasters (Europe)
Platform(s)
PlayStation 2 GameCube Xbox Windows Game Boy Advance
The gameplay takes place in following cities in the United States, including Los Angeles, Miami and Philadelphia, and the races will take place not only in the daytime but also at night.
This game features an underground import racing scene, on which the player's main objective is to live the life of a street racer, gaining respect and affection of various women in the city. This is featured in a way that the player must win a variety of respect challenges to attract girls and maintain a good victory streak in order to ensure that they remain with the player. Once in their car, the girls will present the next open race that the player enters. As the player continues to win races, dance videos will be unlocked for viewing. Also, another plot in the game's story mode is to earn a customized Nissan Skyline GT-R R34 (in which the player first drove in his first race so he can earn money to buy his first car) after winning races.
The game has 50 licensed cars from a variety of manufacturers, including models from Nissan, Toyota, Mitsubishi, Lexus, Subaru, Mazda, and Volkswagen. SRS also features a car damage model that forces the player to drive carefully, heavy damages may impact car performance and heavy repairs may drain the player of money earned from their last race. The Game Boy Advance version doesn't have licensed car names, lacks police chases and career free roam, and customization is different from other platforms.
Development
Promotion at E3 2003
Street Racing Syndicate initially received publishing support from The 3DO Company. While the game was still in development, 3DO declared bankruptcy and auctioned off Street Racing Syndicate along with its other assets. Namco picked up SRS for $1.5 million, compared to the $1.3 million that Ubisoft paid for the Heroes of Might and Magic franchise.[6]
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