![]() ![]() The handling model shows that same potential as well, but its physics are underdeveloped and inconsistent, leading to cars sliding in perfectly straight lines no matter how much you attempt to turn or spin your wheels with the accelerator, in order to bring the back-end around. The remaining three tracks are at least twisty and drift-friendly, and one even incorporates a gymkhana course at the side of the road, and this is where the game shows the potential that goes unfulfilled, sadly. Another is a parking lot with several levels, though it is possible to fall from the top-level into a bottomless pit of nothingness thanks to some lazy, cut-and-paste design. This poor choice is reflected in the track selection too, with only five on offer and one of those is a practically empty, endless highway that isn’t suited at all to drifting. Not even a title screen greets you, instead you’re dropped straight into a garage and expected to buy your first car – from a choice of one really, as you aren’t even given enough money to afford anything else. Once you load up the game, however, it becomes apparent that this is a budget title, as beyond the “built in Unity” splash screen, there is no presentation whatsoever. Driving games based exclusively around drifting are extremely rare, but Drift Streets Japan attempts to go one step further, being an online-only drifting game.Īt just £4.99 on Steam, it’s an immediately wallet-friendly prospect. Driving games with dedicated drifting modes are a little less common.
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