Compara los precios de FlatOut: Complete Pack en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Bugbear Entertainment / Team 6 Studios. Publicado por Strategy First. Lanzado el 13/12/2011. Disponible en PC. Géneros: Single Player, Multiplayer, Split Screen, Third Person, First Person, Bird View, Racing.

Four games of destruction racing in one pack - FlatOut 1, 2, Ultimate Carnage, and FlatOut 3 - covering the full arc of Bugbear's crash-physics legacy, for better and worse.

The FlatOut: Complete Pack is a bundle of four entries in Strategy First's demolition-racing series: the original FlatOut, FlatOut 2, FlatOut: Ultimate Carnage, and FlatOut 3: Chaos and Destruction. The first thing you need to understand is that these are not precision racers. The core loop across the Bugbear-developed titles (FlatOut 1, 2, and Ultimate Carnage) rewards controlled chaos: you build nitro by destroying track-side objects - barrels, fences, tyre walls - and by slamming rivals into barriers. Sit clean and race politely, and the AI will eat you alive. Embrace the destruction economy, and the games open up into something genuinely satisfying. FlatOut 2 and its direct successor Ultimate Carnage are the standouts here. FlatOut 2 introduced three car classes - derby, race, and street - tightened the handling considerably compared to the first game's notoriously slippery physics, and packed in a stunt mode where you catapult your ragdoll driver through the windshield into bowling pins, basketball nets, and rings of fire. Ultimate Carnage is essentially FlatOut 2 rebuilt with a higher polygon count, 12 cars on track instead of 8, dynamic shadow maps on every object, and an entirely new Carnage mode that adds 36 challenges spread across Deathmatch Derbies, Carnage Races, Beat the Bomb events, and stunts scored on Bronze, Silver, and Gold targets. Carnage mode is the mechanical highlight of the pack: it actively punishes clean lap times and rewards offensive driving, making it feel like a distinct game within a game rather than a bolted-on extra. The original FlatOut is rougher. Car handling is looser, tracks feel emptier than in the sequels, and the rubber-banding AI can make late-race collapses feel punitive rather than dramatic. It has historical value as the proof-of-concept for Bugbear's physics engine - 40 deformable parts per car, destructible track environments where fences shatter and water tanks bounce into the pack - but if you are coming in fresh, start with FlatOut 2 and treat the original as a bonus. FlatOut 3: Chaos and Destruction, developed by Team 6 Studios rather than Bugbear, is a noticeably different proposition. It adds monster trucks, tanks, and bulldozers to a roster of 47 vehicles across 62 tracks, which sounds generous on paper, but the community consensus has long been that it lacks the physics feel and track design quality of the Bugbear games. Treat it as a curio included for completeness rather than the main event. For split-screen sessions or solo championship grinding, the FlatOut 2 / Ultimate Carnage era content gives you enough variety to run well past the point where most arcade racers dry up. The Career mode in Ultimate Carnage has you starting with a derby-class clunker, earning credits through slams, power hits, and Super Flips, buying upgrades, and unlocking higher car classes progressively - it is light on tutorial hand-holding but the systems are readable within a single session. One caveat worth noting: the Steam version of Ultimate Carnage was updated in 2024 to a Collector's Edition that strips the old Games for Windows Live dependency, so compatibility on modern hardware is significantly less painful than it used to be. FlatOut 3 still has its rough edges on current operating systems, so check the community hub before diving into that one specifically. The pack makes most sense if you want the whole lineage in one place, or if you are chasing the split-screen and Bird's-eye-view multiplayer modes that the individual game pages sometimes obscure. For pure value in terms of content hours, FlatOut 2 and Ultimate Carnage alone justify the purchase for fans of destruction-focused, physics-driven arcade racing. Diego, Scout Team

FlatOut: Complete Pack
Single PlayerMultiplayerSplit ScreenThird PersonFirst PersonBird ViewRacing

FlatOut: Complete Pack

13 dic 2011Bugbear Entertainment / Team 6 StudiosStrategy First
GamerScout opina

Four games of destruction racing in one pack - FlatOut 1, 2, Ultimate Carnage, and FlatOut 3 - covering the full arc of Bugbear's crash-physics legacy, for better and worse.

PC
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Acerca de FlatOut: Complete Pack

The FlatOut: Complete Pack is a bundle of four entries in Strategy First's demolition-racing series: the original FlatOut, FlatOut 2, FlatOut: Ultimate Carnage, and FlatOut 3: Chaos and Destruction. The first thing you need to understand is that these are not precision racers. The core loop across the Bugbear-developed titles (FlatOut 1, 2, and Ultimate Carnage) rewards controlled chaos: you build nitro by destroying track-side objects - barrels, fences, tyre walls - and by slamming rivals into barriers. Sit clean and race politely, and the AI will eat you alive. Embrace the destruction economy, and the games open up into something genuinely satisfying. FlatOut 2 and its direct successor Ultimate Carnage are the standouts here. FlatOut 2 introduced three car classes - derby, race, and street - tightened the handling considerably compared to the first game's notoriously slippery physics, and packed in a stunt mode where you catapult your ragdoll driver through the windshield into bowling pins, basketball nets, and rings of fire. Ultimate Carnage is essentially FlatOut 2 rebuilt with a higher polygon count, 12 cars on track instead of 8, dynamic shadow maps on every object, and an entirely new Carnage mode that adds 36 challenges spread across Deathmatch Derbies, Carnage Races, Beat the Bomb events, and stunts scored on Bronze, Silver, and Gold targets. Carnage mode is the mechanical highlight of the pack: it actively punishes clean lap times and rewards offensive driving, making it feel like a distinct game within a game rather than a bolted-on extra. The original FlatOut is rougher. Car handling is looser, tracks feel emptier than in the sequels, and the rubber-banding AI can make late-race collapses feel punitive rather than dramatic. It has historical value as the proof-of-concept for Bugbear's physics engine - 40 deformable parts per car, destructible track environments where fences shatter and water tanks bounce into the pack - but if you are coming in fresh, start with FlatOut 2 and treat the original as a bonus. FlatOut 3: Chaos and Destruction, developed by Team 6 Studios rather than Bugbear, is a noticeably different proposition. It adds monster trucks, tanks, and bulldozers to a roster of 47 vehicles across 62 tracks, which sounds generous on paper, but the community consensus has long been that it lacks the physics feel and track design quality of the Bugbear games. Treat it as a curio included for completeness rather than the main event. For split-screen sessions or solo championship grinding, the FlatOut 2 / Ultimate Carnage era content gives you enough variety to run well past the point where most arcade racers dry up. The Career mode in Ultimate Carnage has you starting with a derby-class clunker, earning credits through slams, power hits, and Super Flips, buying upgrades, and unlocking higher car classes progressively - it is light on tutorial hand-holding but the systems are readable within a single session. One caveat worth noting: the Steam version of Ultimate Carnage was updated in 2024 to a Collector's Edition that strips the old Games for Windows Live dependency, so compatibility on modern hardware is significantly less painful than it used to be. FlatOut 3 still has its rough edges on current operating systems, so check the community hub before diving into that one specifically. The pack makes most sense if you want the whole lineage in one place, or if you are chasing the split-screen and Bird's-eye-view multiplayer modes that the individual game pages sometimes obscure. For pure value in terms of content hours, FlatOut 2 and Ultimate Carnage alone justify the purchase for fans of destruction-focused, physics-driven arcade racing.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Etiquetas

steamDestruction DerbyRagdoll PhysicsNitro MechanicCar UpgradesDemolition Career ModeSplit-Screen MultiplayerStunt MinigamesCouch Co-op

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

Memory
2 GB RAM
Storage
10 GB
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce 8600+ / AMD Radeon HD X2600+
Processor
Intel 2GHz Dual Core
System requirements
Windows XP

Recomendados

Memory
4 GB RAM
Storage
20 GB
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 590 / AMD Radeon HD 6970
Processor
Intel Quadcore
System requirements
Windows 7

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Bugbear Entertainment / Team 6 Studios
Distribuidora
Strategy First
Fecha de lanzamiento
13 dic 2011

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible FlatOut: Complete Pack?

FlatOut: Complete Pack está disponible en PC.

¿Cuándo se lanzó FlatOut: Complete Pack?

FlatOut: Complete Pack se lanzó el 13 de diciembre de 2011.

¿Quién desarrolló FlatOut: Complete Pack?

FlatOut: Complete Pack fue desarrollado por Bugbear Entertainment / Team 6 Studios y publicado por Strategy First.