Thanks Sony for NOT adverting updates on your PS+ classic library!

A staple in many people's memories of owning a Playstation, however, Twisted Metal did not aged as well as it's first-year peers and of course it's sequels...

Graphics are really rough around the edges even for an early title game (I have a soft spot for actual low poly graphic games). There are moments in game where it's hard to spot weapon and turbo tokens, thanks to how they camouflage themselves in the LA environment and it's difficult to know what weapon you'll get. It would be very helpful that, at least, SingleTrac could had placed weapon/turbo indicators in the displayed mini-map, they at least had the courtesy to show where health recharge stations are in the map.

Gameplay is no better. The premise is simple: be the last one standing in a free-for-all style deathmatch, by defeating your opponents' vehicle with guns, missiles, specials, collisions (ram damage) and even environmental hazards (ramming them off cliffs). The gameplay can be aggravating due to how the CPU's AI generally work, they always dog-pile on you, the player, with spamming they're infinite arsenal of specials, never bothering to attack other CPUs. They are programmed to pretend to go after other CPUs when they are out of a designated range of a player. It becomes very difficult very fast, especially if you choose the ultra fast/light armoured cars, like Mr. Grimm, Spectre or Crimson Fury, in later levels where you might not have enough lives left. I guess it evens out with how relatively short the game actually is. Only 6 levels with 12 characters to choose, you can easily complete the game in one sitting, thanks to level passwords being universal to all characters.

Music and presentation is where I can give props to SingleTrac. Music is an excellent heavy metal/grunge mix, with a dash of cinematic orchestra, that really immerses the player into a cathartic road rampage against other drivers in the desolated streets of LA set in, a now retro-futuristic world of, 2005. Sucks that audio option is just full on music but with no sound effects, or no music but with full on sound effects. Just got to play it with headphones on or turn up your TV's volumes, just remember to turn in down once you're done playing.
I love the game's presentation, Calypso's Twisted Metal Tournament, the man himself, and the description of how he is presented, is very much a nod to quite a few B-movie cult classics, like Mad Max, and Escape from New York to name a few. It's been widely know that SingleTrac developers intend to have FMVs on the game as Twisted Metal was developed along with another Sony classic, Warhawk), which have a lot of cheesy FMVs we all love so much. Those FMVs were thankfully release to the public with the PS2 port of Twisted Metal: Head-On. I wished they had more time to add back the original FMV endings of each character as it adds more of that schlocky, camp charm I love with the Twisted Metal series in general.

Being the first game of a franchise doesn't automatically make it an instant classic and it shows.
Thanks to how well the game was sold, it being the only Christmas 1995 option does help, lmao. It had all the bells and whistles to make a major improvement and can easily see that with Twisted Metal 2: World Tour a year later.

Reviewed on Aug 14, 2023


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