With cheesy vocal motifs, boinks, buzzes, and the occasional outburst of Spandau Ballet’s ‘Gold’, this is the perfect compliment to the erratic nature of the game. Regardless of whether the change in tone works for you or not, there’s no denying the 80’s gameshow feel is executed well. A cartoony aesthetic and gameshow vibe immediately separate the game from the rest of the series, but Criterion is adamant that, in some ways, Burnout Crash is more Burnout than other Burnouts. True, this isn’t the Burnout you know and love. ![]() ![]() While in the real world, with its seat belts, traffic lights and sleeping policemen, you’ll do everything possible to avoid a vehicular altercation, in Criterion’s first XBLA and PSN offering you’ll do anything possible to cause them. If the screen isn’t a canvas for burning hatch-backs, upside-down lorries and the smouldering remains of buildings, you’re probably doing something wrong. ![]() ![]() Destruction is the name of the game in Burnout Crash.
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