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Crazy Taxi

Did you mean: Crazy Taxi (Racing Arcade Game), Crazy Taxi (series), Crazy Taxi (Racing Dreamcast Game), Crazy Taxi (Racing PlayStation 2 Game) More...

 
Games: Crazy Taxi

Game Description

In Crazy Taxi players choose a taxi and head out into a densely populated world looking for customers. Pull over, pick them up, and drive them to wherever they want to go. As you pass traffic and avoid pedestrians, you'll be awarded extra money as well as a large fare for getting customers to their destinations as quickly as possible. You can choose from one of four drivers: Axel (a well-rounded character), B.D. Joe (his car is fast but has poor traction on non-paved surfaces), Gena (she can accelerate and brake really well), and Gus (his car is big and slow, but it's great on non-paved surfaces). You take your customers to any number of places such as the police station, a local café, Pizza Hut, and Tower Records. You also have a number of moves at your disposal like the crazy dash, crazy drift, and limiter cut. You might also dig up a hidden customer, a reverse track, and another vehicle if you're lucky. With densely populated roads, Naomi-generated graphics, and music from Offspring and Bad Religion,
~ Shawn Sackenheim, All Game Guide
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Wikipedia: Crazy Taxi
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Crazy Taxi
Crazy Taxi cover.jpg
Cover art
Developer(s) Hitmaker, Strangelite
Publisher(s) Sega, Acclaim, Activision
Series Crazy Taxi series
Platform(s) Arcade, Dreamcast, PlayStation 2, Nintendo GameCube, Microsoft Windows, Zeebo
Release date(s) Arcade
1999
Dreamcast

NA January 24 2000
JP January 27, 2000
PAL February 25, 2000
PlayStation 2
NA May 14, 2001
PAL June 1, 2001
JP November 22, 2001
GameCube
NA November 17, 2001
JP May 30, 2002
PAL May 30, 2002
Windows
PAL June 28, 2002
NA September 30, 2002

Genre(s) Racing game, Action game
Mode(s) Single-player
Rating(s) ELSPA: 11+
ESRB: T
Media GD-ROM, CD-ROM, Nintendo optical disc
Arcade system Sega NAOMI

Crazy Taxi is a video game developed by Hitmaker and published by Sega. The game was first released in arcades in 1999 and was ported to the Dreamcast in 2000. Subsequently, it has been brought to the PlayStation 2 and Nintendo GameCube in 2001, and then Microsoft Windows and Game Boy Advance in 2002. Crazy Taxi is the first game in the Crazy Taxi series, and it became one of the few Sega All Stars. It has also earned Greatest Hits status on PlayStation 2 and Player's Choice status on GameCube. Sega followed up on the success of Crazy Taxi by making a sequel, Crazy Taxi 2 for Dreamcast, which included several gameplay changes.

Contents

Gameplay

The arcade version of the game includes one level, and an additional "Original" stage was added for the console versions. Both levels are based in sunny coastal California locales, with steep hills and other strong similarities to San Francisco. North of the map, past the baseball stadium, a high rise city can be found for further adventure. For both levels, the player has a choice of four drivers and their cabs, each of whom has slightly different attributes: Axel is the well-balanced cab choice, BD Joe has the fastest floored speed but least controllability, Gena has the best acceleration/deceleration and braking and Gus has the heaviest cab, enabling him to drive well off-road and even onto most oncoming traffic.

The main objective of the game is to pick up customers and take them to their chosen destination as fast as possible. Along the way, money can be earned—the game is primarily a score attack title—by performing stunts such as the "Crazy Through"—near-misses with other vehicles; both risk and reward are higher when driving against the flow of traffic—and "Crazy Drift"—extended, barely-controlled skidding. It pays large dividends to avoid all other traffic in general. A really severe head on collision can send the cab up into the air, where it will come down facing the wrong direction. Hence, you lose precious time on your route.

The game is possibly most famous for its large green arrow that appears at the top of the screen once you pick up a customer. This arrow always points in the direction of your next destination, and you just have to drive in that direction and stop in the "stop zone". This might seem like cheating, however, with the complexity of the levels and streets, learning to navigate without the arrow would be very difficult and would take a long time. The arrow does not plot your route, but rather sends you in the right direction.

When the destination is reached, that customer's fare is added to the player's total money earned, while "Speedy", "Normal" or "Slow" ratings are awarded depending on how long the player took to complete the journey. If the player is too slow in reaching the objective and the customer's timer runs out, a "Bad" rating is given before even reaching the destination, and the customer jumps from the taxi. There is no penalty for a "Bad" rating, but time will have been wasted attempting to deliver this customer. However, there might be sufficient time available on the main clock for the player to pick up another passenger with hope to make up for their loss. On the arcade version, if a player earns a "Bad" rating, the next fare starts at $0.00.

For each level, one can play under different time conditions: three-minute, five-minute or ten-minute settings, or the "Arcade Rules" used in the original coin-op version of the game, also included in the home versions. In the three time-limited settings, play continues for the designated period of time, after which the cab automatically stops and no more points can be scored. Under Arcade Rules, the player starts with an initial time limit of around a minute, which can be extended through time bonuses earned for "Speedy" and "Normal" deliveries, as well as by making good use of whatever time is left over after making a delivery. Expert players, able to memorize the best route from pick-up to delivery, can thus continue playing for long periods of time – however, as time goes on, the "best" passengers will have been taken to their destinations, leaving fewer potential customers remaining. Thus, as the game continues, the challenge increases.

All versions, except the Windows version, are also notable for their soundtrack featuring Bad Religion and The Offspring.

Console versions of the game also feature the "Crazy Box", a set of minigames that features challenges such as stopping by hitting a pole, picking up and dropping off a number customers within time limits, bowling using the taxi as a ball, and popping giant balloons in a field. These minigames are meant to enhance one's skill at maneuvering the cab; in gameplay this skill will be rewarded by earning more money through "Crazy Throughs" and "Crazy Drifts"

In "Crazy Box" mode, newer challenges can be unlocked by clearing three horizontal or vertical rows. Among these 'unlockables' is a minigame where the player must drive through the winding lanes designed like bowling alleys, knocking down 'pins' as they drive. The player is awarded points for each knockdown, and Grand Slams for a 'strike'.

Advertising

As well as generic destinations such as the city's police station, rail terminal and lookout point, passengers may also request to be taken to Pizza Hut, Tower Records, the FILA sportswear store, Levi's store or Kentucky Fried Chicken. There are also vans on the roads with the WOW! logo visible on the side. Each of these chains are modeled as a location in the game. Although this is one of the most prominent examples of product placement in video gaming history, it is generally looked upon relatively favorably amongst gamers, perhaps because it gives a sense of realism to the fictional city in the game.

All product placements were removed from the later PSP release, and replaced with generic store names, such as "Fast Food Chicken Restaurant."

Cars

The vehicles used in the game are generic, though BD Joe's and Axel's resemble Cadillacs/Chevrolets, Gena's a Nova and Gus' a 1949 Buick.[citation needed]

Windows version

In 2002, Strangelite ported the game to Microsoft Windows. The Windows version had a different soundtrack. It did not sell well and was eventually released as part of the xplosiv budget range.

Soundtracks

The soundtrack for Crazy Taxi is composed entirely of punk rock music from the bands Bad Religion and The Offspring. The following list is for the Arcade, Dreamcast, PS2, and GameCube versions:

  • Bad Religion – Inner Logic1
  • Bad Religion – Ten in 2010
  • Bad Religion – Them and Us
  • Bad Religion – Hear It 2
  • The Offspring – Way Down the Line
  • The Offspring – All I Want
  • The Offspring – Change the World3

In the GameCube and PlayStation 2 versions there is a line in the song "Way Down The Line" that is altered.

The following list is for the Microsoft Windows version:

  • Pivit – Fingercuffs1
  • Pivit – Middle Children
  • Too Rude – The Distance
  • Total Chaos – Let It Roll
  • Total Chaos – What You Gonna Do

Note 1: Used for the credits song.
Note 2: Used for the character selection screen.
Note 3: Uses the beginning of the song as a loop for the high score entry.

External links


 
 

Did you mean: Crazy Taxi (Racing Arcade Game), Crazy Taxi (series), Crazy Taxi (Racing Dreamcast Game), Crazy Taxi (Racing PlayStation 2 Game) More...


 

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Games. Copyright © 2008 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Game Guide ® , a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Crazy Taxi" Read more