Untitled Racing Game
Could be interesting
A racing game with futuristic cars, by automotive designer Anthony Jannarelly, using next-gen technologies.
LA Street Racing is a street racing game set in Los Angeles where players climb from 61st place to challenge the underground champion Matt Peacock. Players start with a basic car and compete in high-stakes races at various locations across LA, betting car parts and eventually whole vehicles in pink slip races. The progression system features four prestige levels, each unlocking new racing locations and tougher opponents. Car customization involves strategic decisions about part compatibility and performance trade-offs, as mixing different upgrade tiers affects handling. The racing model emphasizes realistic vehicle physics, requiring careful braking and cornering techniques, while rewarding clean driving with nitrous boosts. The game includes multiplayer support for up to eight racers online.
Drive Isle is an open world driving game mainly focused on random driving and drifting, if you will.
Option Tuning Car Battle Spec-R is the third in a series of PlayStation racing games sponsored by the Japanese magazine Option.
In Super Street: The Game it’s all about building your own ride. Start from scratch as you build your own supercar part by part. Use over 700 authentic car parts from the biggest aftermarket brands to create your ultimate ride and unleash it on the streets.
Prime was an unreleased game by Malibu Interactive based on the comic of the same name.
This is a very early mode-7 racer based on the Hanna-Barbera cartoon that aired in the late 1960s. The game has a large variety of stages, but there is no collision detection, and the opponent racers are not programmed to stay on the track. It looks like it would have been designed to be a Mario Kart clone, complete with weapons and stage hazards, but none of that has been included in this prototype. There is a near final prototype of the Genesis version of the game, which shares many of the same graphics, notably with the background and cars. The layout of the stages is quite a bit more like Mario Kart in the SNES prototype. Of course, it is entirely possible that the final SNES version would have had the same design as the Genesis version if it was completed.
A cancelled top-down racing action game for the Sega Genesis.
IMSA World Championship Racing is an unreleased sports prototype racing video game that was in development and planned to be published by Studio 3DO on a scheduled fall 1997 release date exclusively for the Panasonic M2. Had it been released before the launch of the console was cancelled, it would have become the first officially licensed title by the International Motor Sports Association and one of the first titles to be launched alongside the system.
A cancelled Nintendo 64 game based on a movie.