Sega Rally 2006

Sega Rally 2006
Developer(s) Sega
Publisher(s) Sega
Composer(s) Takenobu Mitsuyoshi
Jun Senoue
Hiroshi Kawaguchi
Kentaro Kobayashi
Takeshi Isozaki
Platform(s) PlayStation 2
Release date(s)
  • JP January 12, 2006
  • KOR March 30, 2006
Genre(s) Racing game
Mode(s) Single-player

Sega Rally 2006 is an arcade oriented racing game developed and published by Sega for PlayStation 2. It is the third installment in the decade running Sega Rally series, and it was released in Japan on January 12, 2006 and in Korea on March 30, 2006. This version is the first non-arcade-version–based Sega Rally. Its action footage was used in World Rally Championship.

Development

Sega initially planned the PlayStation 2 release date for 2005 as a 10-year anniversary celebration version, and was to be named "Sega Rally 2005", but the launch date was postponed. Several features have been removed from the previous Sega Rally 2 for Dreamcast, both Network Battle and two-player Battle multiplayer modes are not available anymore. The music genre has been changed from instrumental Hard Rock with classic tunes such as "Conditioned Reflex" (the 1996 "Plus" edition BGM being performed by the Japanese act "X-BAND") to Lo-Fi synthesizer driven pop becoming a key change in the series. When Sega Rally 2 offered 3ch Surround sound, the 2006 edition is only Stereo/Mono, which is a surprising backstep on a 6ch Dolby Digital/Pro Logic II capable machine.

Additionally, the depicted "fog" effect from Sega Rally 2, which was pointed to be a consequence of the use of Windows CE devkit, has been replaced by a heavy "clipping" effect. The increased speed in the driver's view can be explained by the removal of the rear view mirror. The change is also noticeable within the car selection.

Sega Rally Championship was introduced with '92 & '94 World Rally Championship winner cars, being both Didier Auriol's French flagged cars, the Sega Saturn version adding Sandro Munari's hidden Stratos HF Gr4 WRC '77. Sega Rally 2 Arcade followed this path with four WRC '97 cars: Carlos Sainz's Corolla WRC, Tommi Mäkinen's Lancer Evo IV WRC, Colin McRae's Impreza WRC, Gilles Panizzi's 306 Maxi plus, Ari Vatanen's Escort WRC '98 & Sandro Munari's Stratos HF Gr4 WRC '77. The original Celica & Delta from Sega Rally 1995 were hidden in the Arcade version. Due to its "10-year Championship" mode, Sega Rally 2 Dreamcast had added a large number of cars to the ones already available in the Arcade. Switching from Europe-based FIA (Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile) WRC (World Rally Championship) to North American–based SCCA (Sports Car Club of America) ProRally, the latter allowing more powerful specs, Sega Rally 2006 abandon all the vehicles from Sega Rally 2 to introduce a brand new selection. The three original 1995 classics, Celica WRC '94, Delta WRC '92 & Stratos WRC '77 being also included as hidden Extra cars. Some Sega Rally 2006 Open Class cars are Mark Lovell's Pikes Peak International HillClimb winning Impreza WRX ProRally '03 (the same model appearing in Enthusia Professional Racing), Tim O'Neil's Focus SVT ProRally '03 and the Lancer Evolution VIII MR ProRally '03. The Subaru Impreza and the Evo retain the same colors used in the original Xbox rally game, Rallisport Challenge 2.

Music

The game's soundtrack was written by various members of Sega Digital Studio, including Takenobu Mitsuyoshi, Jun Senoue, Hiroshi Kawaguchi, Kentaro Kobayashi, and Takeshi Isozaki. Additional compositions were provided by Richard Jacques, Hideki Naganuma, Junko Shiratsu, Tomoya Ohtani, Mitsuharu Fukuyama, Naofumi Hataya, and Tomonori Sawada. The official soundtrack, titled Sega Rally 2006 Original Sound Track, was released in Japan on January 18, 2006.

Series 4

An arrange version of Sega Rally Championship 1995 Arcade is unlockable in the Sega Rally 2006 Arcade mode since Series 4 is a four-stage championship actually based on a 128bit updated version of the original Arcade tracks.

Beating "Series 4" unlocks the Sega Rally 1995 Delta HF Integrale WRC '92 Extra car.

Game modes

Sega Rally 2006 features three game modes: Career Mode, Arcade Mode and the classical Time Attack Mode.

Campaign releases

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, November 12, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.