Compara los precios de FlatOut en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Bugbear Entertainment. Publicado por Strategy First. Lanzado el 2/2/2007. Disponible en PC, Xbox. Géneros: Action, Racing, Simulation. Puntuación Metacritic: 72/100.

Demolition derby meets arcade racer in a game that actively rewards you for destroying everything, including your own driver.

FlatOut is a physics-heavy arcade racer from Bugbear Entertainment built around one core idea: collisions are not something you avoid, they are the point. The tracks are littered with destructible objects, rival cars that crumple on impact, and shortcuts that only open up after you have plowed through a fence at full speed. It sits somewhere between a traditional racing game and a demolition derby simulator, and that middle ground is where it is most fun. The career mode strings together a series of race events across dirt tracks, urban circuits, and demolition arenas. You earn money from finishing positions and general mayhem, then spend it upgrading your vehicle. The upgrade loop is simple by modern standards but functional enough to keep you invested across the campaign. The car roster leans into beaters and junkers rather than licensed supercars, which fits the tone perfectly. Nobody is here to preserve their paintwork. The headline feature, and the thing most players remember, is the ragdoll mechanic. Hit a wall or another car hard enough and your driver launches through the windshield, tumbling across the track like a crash-test dummy with a grudge. Several dedicated minigames are built entirely around this, turning your driver into a projectile and scoring you on distance or target accuracy. It is absurd, it ages well, and it still lands laughs on first playthrough. Where FlatOut shows its age is in the AI and the later career difficulty. Opponent rubber-banding is noticeable once you move past the early tiers, and the CPU cars have an uncanny ability to catch up regardless of how clean your racing line is. The physics, while impressive for their era, occasionally produce inconsistent results in heavy pile-ups. The track variety is decent but not enormous, and without online infrastructure still active, multiplayer is a local or LAN affair only. For players who want a deep sim or a modern open-world racer, this is the wrong shelf. But for anyone who enjoys short, punchy sessions of chaotic demolition racing, FlatOut holds up better than its age suggests. The 91% positive rating across more than six thousand Steam reviews reflects a playerbase that came back to replay it and found it still works. Mod support is limited compared to something like BeamNG, but the base game has enough content to justify a run-through. Approach it as a stress-relief arcade racer rather than a technical challenge and it will deliver exactly what it promises. Diego, Scout Team

FlatOut

FlatOut

2 feb 2007Bugbear EntertainmentStrategy First
GamerScout opina

Demolition derby meets arcade racer in a game that actively rewards you for destroying everything, including your own driver.

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FlatOut is a physics-heavy arcade racer from Bugbear Entertainment built around one core idea: collisions are not something you avoid, they are the point. The tracks are littered with destructible objects, rival cars that crumple on impact, and shortcuts that only open up after you have plowed through a fence at full speed. It sits somewhere between a traditional racing game and a demolition derby simulator, and that middle ground is where it is most fun. The career mode strings together a series of race events across dirt tracks, urban circuits, and demolition arenas. You earn money from finishing positions and general mayhem, then spend it upgrading your vehicle. The upgrade loop is simple by modern standards but functional enough to keep you invested across the campaign. The car roster leans into beaters and junkers rather than licensed supercars, which fits the tone perfectly. Nobody is here to preserve their paintwork. The headline feature, and the thing most players remember, is the ragdoll mechanic. Hit a wall or another car hard enough and your driver launches through the windshield, tumbling across the track like a crash-test dummy with a grudge. Several dedicated minigames are built entirely around this, turning your driver into a projectile and scoring you on distance or target accuracy. It is absurd, it ages well, and it still lands laughs on first playthrough. Where FlatOut shows its age is in the AI and the later career difficulty. Opponent rubber-banding is noticeable once you move past the early tiers, and the CPU cars have an uncanny ability to catch up regardless of how clean your racing line is. The physics, while impressive for their era, occasionally produce inconsistent results in heavy pile-ups. The track variety is decent but not enormous, and without online infrastructure still active, multiplayer is a local or LAN affair only. For players who want a deep sim or a modern open-world racer, this is the wrong shelf. But for anyone who enjoys short, punchy sessions of chaotic demolition racing, FlatOut holds up better than its age suggests. The 91% positive rating across more than six thousand Steam reviews reflects a playerbase that came back to replay it and found it still works. Mod support is limited compared to something like BeamNG, but the base game has enough content to justify a run-through. Approach it as a stress-relief arcade racer rather than a technical challenge and it will deliver exactly what it promises.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Etiquetas

steamDemolition DerbyRagdoll PhysicsArcade RacerCareer ModeVehicle UpgradesDestructionLAN MultiplayerMinigames

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

Processor
Intel® Core i3 / AMD Phenom™ II X2
Memory
4 GB RAM
Graphics
NVIDIA® GeForce® GTX 650 / AMD Radeon™ HD 7750
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
200 MB available space
Sound Card
DirectX Compatible…

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Reseñas y valoraciones

Metacritic
72
Steam
91%(6,430)

Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Bugbear Entertainment
Distribuidora
Strategy First
Fecha de lanzamiento
2 feb 2007

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¿Cuánto cuesta FlatOut?

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¿Dónde puedo comprar FlatOut más barato?

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible FlatOut?

FlatOut está disponible en PC, Xbox.

¿Cuándo se lanzó FlatOut?

FlatOut se lanzó el 2 de febrero de 2007.

¿Quién desarrolló FlatOut?

FlatOut fue desarrollado por Bugbear Entertainment y publicado por Strategy First.

¿Merece la pena comprar FlatOut?

FlatOut tiene una puntuación Metacritic de 72/100, lo que lo convierte en uno de los títulos destacados de Action. Mira las reseñas completas, las valoraciones y los tiempos de duración en esta página para decidir.