![]() ![]() The next notable title in the road-carnage series was FlatOut, which came by in 2004 on PC, PlayStation 2 and Xbox. Since Carmageddon was a huge success and basically everyone born in the ‘80s or early ‘90s spent hours in front of a tiny CRT screen endlessly smashing other cars and paint the road with digital blood, every other game house came with their version of driving recklessness - some better, some horrible. ![]() How the hell did that became more popular than a game with different endings? This says a lot about our violent species nature, but anyway. On the other hand, Carmageddon was only offering people and cows to slaughter in order to add time to the clock. Moreover, Twisted Metal was offering a storyline, not too complex, but it came with different endings depending on which character you chose at the beginning. It was released in 1995 for both PC and PlayStation, featuring multiple vehicles and weapons to bash and destroy the other opponents. Of course, there was also Twisted Metal but this was better known among the hipsters of the time. ![]() ![]() Unfortunately that can’t happen, but we found a way to release some steam in a virtual world - car-wrecking games, or demolition derby games as some prefer.Ĭar-wrecking video games have a lot of history and it all probably started with the notorious Carmageddon, where the effort leading to the first place was pretty much equal to slaying everything in your path, while using cardboard-like graphics. ![]()
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