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Driver San Francisco Races Back to the Dark Ages of Mobile Gaming

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zd6iBT7S3U4

Before the Android and the iPhone mobile gaming seemed a hopeless endeavor, where every game released felt like a cereal box toy facsimile of a more complete console experience. Gameloft’s Android version of Driver San Francisco remembers those days all too well.

Our own Stephen Totilo called the console version of Driver San Francisco ā€œthe best game no one is talking aboutā€œ. and having played it briefly myself I can easily see why. The driving is exhilarating and responsive. The car shifting ability, allowing the game’s hero to leave his body and possess other drivers, is a fresh new take on Grand Theft Auto. Drop those two features into a vast open world filled with jumps, steep hills, and even steeper hills, and you’ve got arcade driving paradise.

https://lastchance.cc/driver-san-francisco-is-the-best-game-no-one-is-talking-5841808%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E

The Android version has none of these things. The vast open world is a series of straightaways and turns. The shifting ability has transformed into a buying a new damn car ability. That and, well, just look at it — I made the video for a reason. It’s just a step above one of those old-timey arcade machines where the car was a piece of plastic you moved back and forth along the bottom of the cabinet with a knob.

What makes the whole thing worse is that this is coming from Gameloft, the folks that create games like Asphalt 6. They know how to do driving controls on a touchscreen device. They’ve proven they can convey a sense of speed on the smaller screen. Hell, they could have just tossed a 1970 yellow and black Dodge Challenger into any one of their recently released racers and it would have been a better game than this.

Perhaps Gameloft was trying to play on the classic feel of the game’s console inspiration, hearkening back to automobile-driven action movies of the 70s. Unfortunately Driver San Francisco for the Android does not feel like a classic. It just feels old.


You can contact Michael Fahey, the author of this post, at [emailĀ protected]. You can also find him on Twitter, Facebook, and lurking around our #tips page.

Driver San Francisco [Android Market]

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