Wave Race 64

Wave Race 64

North American Nintendo 64 cover art
Developer(s) Nintendo EAD
Publisher(s) Nintendo
Director(s) Katsuya Eguchi
Shinya Takahashi
Producer(s) Shigeru Miyamoto
Composer(s) Kazumi Totaka
Platform(s) Nintendo 64, iQue Player
Release date(s)

Nintendo 64

  • JP September 27, 1996
  • NA November 1, 1996
  • PAL April 29, 1997

iQue Player

  • CHN November 2003
Genre(s) Racing
Mode(s) Single player, 2 player simultaneous

Wave Race 64 (ウエーブレース64 Uēbu Rēsu Rokujūyon) is a racing game developed and published by Nintendo for the Nintendo 64 in 1996, as the successor to F-Zero[1] and a follow-up to the Game Boy game Wave Race. In Wave Race 64, the player races on jet skis in many different weather conditions, on a variety of different courses. The game was sponsored by the Kawasaki Heavy Industries brand, and featured product placement for The Coca-Cola Company's brand Fanta. Wave Race 64 was released August 6, 2007 for the Virtual Console in North America;[2] in PAL territories it was released on August 17. It received critical acclaim.

Gameplay

The objective of each race is to beat the other racers while also successfully maneuvering the jet-ski around various buoys. There are two types of buoys: red colored, which are signified by an R on them and must be passed on the right side, and yellow buoys, which are marked with an L and must be passed on the left side. Each time a buoy is correctly passed, a power arrow will light and the jet-ski will gain speed. Up to five arrows can be lit in order to obtain maximum power. As a result, maintaining the process will allow the player to maintain their power without any misses.

Failure to do either of these will result in a loss of power (though the arrows can be lit again) and missing five buoys over the course of a race will result in disqualification. Leaving the course (either by leaving the area limited by pink buoys or by leaving the water altogether) for more than five seconds will also result in disqualification.

Game modes

The game modes are:

The options menu allows the player to check audio, look over and erase records, and manage saved data from either the game itself or the Controller Pak. The names of the characters and the racing conditions (required laps, wave conditions, etc.) can also be changed.

Development

Wave Race 64 was originally developed as a racing game featuring futuristic speedboats[3] that changed forms by retracting or expanding themselves, as shown in footage from the 1995 Nintendo Shoshinkai show. The game features accurate wave physics, which are notorious for being difficult to program.

Characters

Ryota and Ayumi racing on Sunny Beach.

Wave Race 64 has four characters:[4]

Every character's categories may be customized before starting the race. However, this will only change the skills of the character in a limited tolerance. For example, even setting Dave Mariner to maximum control will not result to an equal controlling experience as with Miles Jeter.

Reception

Reception
Aggregate scores
AggregatorScore
GameRankings90.67%[5]
Metacritic92/100[6]
Review scores
PublicationScore
AllGame[7]
GameSpot8.6/10[8]
IGN9.7/10[9]

Wave Race 64 was a critical success. It was rated the 127th best game made on a Nintendo System in Nintendo Power's Top 200 Games list.[10] It received a rating of 9.7/10 from IGN,[9] and 9/10 on the Wii's Virtual Console[11] and in a list of 100, Wave Race 64 was rated, by IGN, as the 33rd greatest game of all time as of 2003.[12] In the 2005 IGN list, its position was #37.[13] GameSpot gave it an 8.6 and praised the game for its graphics and controls.[8] Sales were also high, with 1,950,000 units in the United States and 154,000 in Japan.[14][15]

Ryota Hayami appears as a trophy in Super Smash Bros. Melee, though the trophy depicts him in his Wave Race: Blue Storm outfit.

Tomonobu Itagaki, the creator of the Dead or Alive series, included a jet-ski mode on the game Dead or Alive Xtreme 2 because he is a great fan of Wave Race 64.

Re-releases

Like Super Mario 64, Wave Race 64 was re-released in Japan in July 1997 as Wave Race 64 Shindō Pak Taiō Version (ウエーブレース64 振動パック対応バージョン). This re-release took advantage of the Rumble Pak (known as the "Shindō Pak" in Japan), as well as adding ghost functions for time trial.[16] In addition, some of the songs and sound effects in the game were altered as well.[17]

Wave Race 64 was released on the Virtual Console on August 6, 2007. Unlike almost all other Virtual Console games, Wave Race 64 was modified, with the in-game Kawasaki and Fanta banners removed, most likely owing to an expired licensing deal. They are anachronistically replaced by Wii and Nintendo DS advertisements.[18] The Jet Skis themselves have also been slightly modified and bear no Kawasaki logos. The Kawasaki logo on the title screen was also removed. However, when it was released on the Wii U Virtual Console on December 31, 2015 in Europe, the Kawasaki banners and logos were restored.

See also

Aqua Jet

References

External links

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