All I can say to temper my flowing love for this game is 'Holy Cow!'
Vanishing Point is a masterpiece. Starting with the hard asphalt to the shimmering paintjobs,
Vanishing Point never stopped amazing me. From the moment I put this lovely disc in my
Dreamcast , I was flabbergasted. I got going in my perfectly rendered Ford Mustang Cobra at a smooth, non-stop 60 frames per second. The reflections off of my paint job reassured me that my car was brand new. The trees cast perfect shadows, which sparked a sudden nostalgia for a family picnic. The road was blistering on the straight-aways, and every time I burned rubber, perfect little black marks painted themselves perfectly; so perfectly in fact, that I could smell the rubber in my living room. The neat thing about that is when you come back around for the second and third laps, the rubber marks are still there. (Excellent attention to detail.) Every racing game is going to have wrecks, and
Vanishing Point is no different. Showers of sparks coming off the wall, and fearsome twists and turns while you're in the air had me appreciating the obvious time the programmers put into this game. I was even more impressed when I changed the camera angle to the cockpit view and the graphics didn't lose their touch at all. This game is real pretty, and any game that's pretty is all the more fun to play, especially a racing game.
Acclaim decided that what better way to compliment a perfect visual exhibition than with busy, pulse-pumping electronica music. The sound effects and drum beats are exactly what a racer of this caliber needs. I'm seriously hoping that I can find the soundtrack to this game, because it's professional, top-notch quality. I know what you're thinking now. 'If everything is that good so far, then the sound effects are bad.' Not so Romeo. The engines sound just like they do in real life. The Ford Ranger's four cylinders stroking as hard as they can to get to 75 mph, while the Cobra's eight cylinders rumble and sound absolutely heavenly. The faster four cylinder cars actually sound like there's a big Turbo booster under their hood, because there's a slight little whine that let's you know that this car is no joke. There's also the underestimated tire squeals and crash sounds, all done so well, but the real 1-2 punch this game has is the interactive backgrounds and the different sounds they make. For example, one part of the first race has a jet taking off that's so majestic and it sounds like the real thing. There's a bullet train in another race which whizzes by you and sounds so good doing it. I won't ruin some of the other great surprises, because Vanishing Point is full of them.