

- Prototype ship challenge wipeout 2048 1080p#
- Prototype ship challenge wipeout 2048 full#
- Prototype ship challenge wipeout 2048 Ps4#
- Prototype ship challenge wipeout 2048 ps3#
- Prototype ship challenge wipeout 2048 psp#
Prototype ship challenge wipeout 2048 Ps4#
Whether you’re playing on a regular PlayStation 4 or the suped up PS4 Pro, the action never buckles.
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No matter if you ‘slum’ it at 1080p on a normal PS4, or enjoy the Pro’s pristine 4K visuals, this is as sharp and vibrant racer as you can find. Keep your nerve, drive cannily, and you can often overcome whatever attacks the extra angry AI throws at you. Yet there’s no Mario Kart blue shell syndrome here.

Is it freakin’ irritating to get hit by a course-rippling shockwave on a final lap? Hell yes. No, it’s because you’re a greedy fool who thought they could wait until the last second to break on that last turn on Moa Therma. When you screw up in Wipeout, it’s not down to controller lag or dropped frames. Whether you’re shifting the weight of the ever-reliable Feisar craft to tackle tricky turns or desperately hoping the bulky Qirex-RD’s shield will withstand another barrage of rockets, the interplay between responsive steering and punchy power-ups is a joy. Plenty of racers have tried to copy Wipeout down the years (I’m looking at you especially, Fast RMX) but none of its pretenders have ever matched the king’s handling model. Turns out, you kinda have to concentrate when driving at 573 km/h. Controlling the series’ iconic craft as they aggressively torpedo each other with rockets and fancy futuristic mines is a constant dance of death – lose concentration even for a split second, and speed of sound wrecks await.
Prototype ship challenge wipeout 2048 full#
Even after spending two decades mastering hard banking air brakes (double tap L2 or R2 to shift your ship’s momentum in extra snappy style) I can’t think of another game that’s quite as slickly savage as Wipeout in full flow. The quantity of content is impressive, but it’s the quality of the racing that makes the deepest impression.

Of course, the real selling point of the Omega Collection is how it looks and runs. 26 tracks, all of which have mirror versions 46 crazy quick anti-grav ships eight player online races nine modes that span vanilla fare like time trials and tournaments, to more high concept contests, such as rounds of Detonator where you clear courses of neon mines with your craft’s laser weapons. Indeed, there’s so much content here, you could be racing for weeks and still not tick off every event. The content may be recycled, but considering the budget price and the polish that’s clearly been poured into these ports, it’s hard to overly grumble at déjà vu when the bundle is so generous. Talk about the speedster snake eating its own tail. In essence, Wipeout Omega Collection is a remaster of a remaster. Rounding off the trio is Wipeout 2048: a remaster of a PS Vita racer that hit Sony’s handheld five years ago.
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Next, there’s Wipeout HD Fury, which is really just glorified DLC, featuring a few more courses once again cribbed from the PSP games, and three additional modes focusing on combat.
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Wipeout HD is probably the meatiest title in this package, yet even when it first came out on PS3 in 2008, it was already an amalgamation of jumbled together tracks from PSP’s Wipeout Pure, and its sequel Wipeout Pulse. Sony’s prettied up racer is also a somewhat confusing cluster of three old games. It moves like a cheetah in heat (albeit one that hovers in the air and weighs six tonnes) while it handles with such forceful, fluid grace, it’s impossible to take your eyes off the zero-G action. This blisteringly rapid, gorgeously smooth anti-grav racer isn’t just one of the sexiest remasters of the current generation, it’s damn near the best looking game on PS4.Īt full throttle, Wipeout Omega Collection is a ferocious blur of sumptuous, searing sights. 22 years on, if Future Me could hop in a DeLorean and travel back to show that kid even 30 seconds of Wipeout Omega Collection running at 4K/60 frames per second on PS4 Pro, I think his eyes would implode.

When the first Wipeout came out on the original PlayStation back in late 1995, I was but a freckled faced, ten-year-old whippersnapper.
