DiRT
- June 19, 2007 15:39 PM PST
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Remember when you were a little kid how strangely fulfilling it was to get so dirty your mom thought you'd never scrub all that grime off? DiRT revels in coating itself with layers of earthy muck almost as much, albeit in a much bigger sandbox.
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Making Mud Pies
DiRT is the first Xbox 360 racer to arrive with truly next-generation graphics. Mud and rainwater spray off all four tires onto the detailed curves of each vehicle's bodywork, slowly covering the paint job and sponsor decals of each purchasable skin with a blanket of convincing filth. The pesky jaggies that mar other top tier racers are hard to find, and the soft vehicle shadows manage to avoid the nasty stair-stepping artifacts that have thus far seemed the console's curse. DiRT even sports one of the coolest menu interfaces yet seen. Light bloom often seems a touch exaggerated, and some of the textures offer more blur than grit, but there's no denying that the game looks great.
The audio work doesn't reach the lofty standard set by last generation's aurally stellar ToCA Race Driver 3, but the engine sounds are convincing enough, and the suspension bumps, metal-on-metal grinds, and gut-wrenching car-totaling crash crunches make you feel like you're in the cockpit even if you choose a 3rd-person view that hovers a safe distance behind your ride.
Thinning the Herd
Career mode is the meat in DiRT's off-road sandwich, delivering eleven progressively smaller tiers of challenging action, for a total of 66 events spread across six disciplines. Traditional rally races partner you with a co-driver who calls out upcoming turns and their severity, hill climbs put you on your own against hairpin curves, and crossover face-offs pit you against a single opponent on a track that forces your paths to cross at the midpoint.
These events are as technically demanding as they are addictive, despite the low head count, but it's when you add a full stable of rivals that DiRT really shines as contentious crowds jostle each other across alternating segments of dirt and tarmac. The frame rate might stutter a bit, but all those rumbling motors and desperate pilots add up to the title's high point.
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