Compara los precios de Riptide GP: Renegade en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Vector Unit. Publicado por Vector Unit. Lanzado el 26/7/2016. Disponible en PC, Xbox. Géneros: Racing.

Wave Race nostalgia meets futuristic jet-ski chaos - split-screen for up to six, a career with actual boss fights, and tricks that double as your boost meter.

My Saturday night crew has a rule: if a game boots up in under thirty seconds and someone's in last place laughing within two minutes, it stays on the hard drive. Riptide GP: Renegade cleared that bar on the first try. Vector Unit built this one specifically for consoles and PC rather than porting up from mobile like earlier entries, and the difference shows the moment you hit your first swell and feel the wave physics push your hydrojet sideways into a competitor. The career mode is the meaty solo hook. You pick your rider, get framed by a rival racer named Krex, do your time, then claw your way back up through the underground hydrojet circuit - beating boss racers in one-on-one events to recruit them and steal their hydrojets for your garage. Race types include standard circuit races, elimination events where the last-place rider drops out on a timer, checkpoint time trials, and freestyle rounds where you are purely scoring tricks for points. That last one is a standout - bigger air means riskier trick combinations, and bailing costs you so much time that there is a real risk-reward calculation happening mid-jump. The career progression ties upgrades to both cash earned per race and XP that unlocks new stunt moves, so there is a satisfying loop here even if you hit difficulty walls mid-campaign. And you will hit them. The AI difficulty spikes noticeably as you push deeper, and the cop hydrojets that appear during certain events feel less like a clever obstacle and more like a cheap punishment aimed specifically at whoever is in the lead. For couch multiplayer, this is genuinely hard to beat in the water-racing niche. Split-screen supports up to six players on console, and the performance holds up cleanly even with the screen carved into multiple chunks. On PC, local split-screen is confirmed present with gamepad controllers required per player - standard wheels or HOTAS rigs are not really the right hardware here, just grab a stack of standard gamepads and you are sorted. Online goes up to eight players, and the Xbox / Windows 10 versions share cross-platform matchmaking, though Steam players are in a separate pool. Online is functional and low-latency in practice, but there is no persistent progression across multiplayer modes, so once you finish career the long-term hook thins out fast. Visually it punches above its indie price point - dynamic water that swells, rises, and reacts to in-race events like rocket launches, environments ranging from flooded city aqueducts to a military base under attack, and nine tracks each hiding shortcuts and Easter eggs worth hunting. The audio is the weakest link: repetitive electronic house soundtrack and hydrojets that sound whiny rather than powerful. Load a Spotify playlist in the background and that complaint mostly disappears. Controls are immediately accessible - acceleration, brake, boost, and analog-stick trick combos that any casual player can get into within one race but that reward mastery over time. If your benchmark for a racing game includes whether four people can play it on a Saturday night without a twenty-minute setup process, Riptide GP: Renegade earns its spot. The solo career has real depth for a budget title, the wave physics feel genuinely distinct from anything else in the genre, and the split-screen holding frame rate is not a given at this price level - Vector Unit made it work. The AI rubber-banding and cop frustration in late career are real friction points, but they are survivable. Riley, Scout Team

Riptide GP: Renegade

Riptide GP: Renegade

26 jul 2016Vector Unit
GamerScout opina

Wave Race nostalgia meets futuristic jet-ski chaos - split-screen for up to six, a career with actual boss fights, and tricks that double as your boost meter.

PCXbox
Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Platinum
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Mínimo histórico: €3.99

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Acerca de Riptide GP: Renegade

My Saturday night crew has a rule: if a game boots up in under thirty seconds and someone's in last place laughing within two minutes, it stays on the hard drive. Riptide GP: Renegade cleared that bar on the first try. Vector Unit built this one specifically for consoles and PC rather than porting up from mobile like earlier entries, and the difference shows the moment you hit your first swell and feel the wave physics push your hydrojet sideways into a competitor. The career mode is the meaty solo hook. You pick your rider, get framed by a rival racer named Krex, do your time, then claw your way back up through the underground hydrojet circuit - beating boss racers in one-on-one events to recruit them and steal their hydrojets for your garage. Race types include standard circuit races, elimination events where the last-place rider drops out on a timer, checkpoint time trials, and freestyle rounds where you are purely scoring tricks for points. That last one is a standout - bigger air means riskier trick combinations, and bailing costs you so much time that there is a real risk-reward calculation happening mid-jump. The career progression ties upgrades to both cash earned per race and XP that unlocks new stunt moves, so there is a satisfying loop here even if you hit difficulty walls mid-campaign. And you will hit them. The AI difficulty spikes noticeably as you push deeper, and the cop hydrojets that appear during certain events feel less like a clever obstacle and more like a cheap punishment aimed specifically at whoever is in the lead. For couch multiplayer, this is genuinely hard to beat in the water-racing niche. Split-screen supports up to six players on console, and the performance holds up cleanly even with the screen carved into multiple chunks. On PC, local split-screen is confirmed present with gamepad controllers required per player - standard wheels or HOTAS rigs are not really the right hardware here, just grab a stack of standard gamepads and you are sorted. Online goes up to eight players, and the Xbox / Windows 10 versions share cross-platform matchmaking, though Steam players are in a separate pool. Online is functional and low-latency in practice, but there is no persistent progression across multiplayer modes, so once you finish career the long-term hook thins out fast. Visually it punches above its indie price point - dynamic water that swells, rises, and reacts to in-race events like rocket launches, environments ranging from flooded city aqueducts to a military base under attack, and nine tracks each hiding shortcuts and Easter eggs worth hunting. The audio is the weakest link: repetitive electronic house soundtrack and hydrojets that sound whiny rather than powerful. Load a Spotify playlist in the background and that complaint mostly disappears. Controls are immediately accessible - acceleration, brake, boost, and analog-stick trick combos that any casual player can get into within one race but that reward mastery over time. If your benchmark for a racing game includes whether four people can play it on a Saturday night without a twenty-minute setup process, Riptide GP: Renegade earns its spot. The solo career has real depth for a budget title, the wave physics feel genuinely distinct from anything else in the genre, and the split-screen holding frame rate is not a given at this price level - Vector Unit made it work. The AI rubber-banding and cop frustration in late career are real friction points, but they are survivable.

Riley
Riley · Scout Team

Sports & racing

Etiquetas

singleplayermultiplayerlocal-coopachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:indieWave RacingStunt System6-Player Split-ScreenBoss FightsUpgrade ProgressionFreestyle ModeCross-Platform OnlineGamepad-Optimised

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows 7, 8, or 10 (64-bit)
Memory
512 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 10
Storage
400 MB available space
Graphics
512MB VRAM
Processor
1 Ghz or faster processor

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Vector Unit
Distribuidora
Vector Unit
Fecha de lanzamiento
26 jul 2016

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Riptide GP: Renegade?

Riptide GP: Renegade está disponible en PC, Xbox.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Riptide GP: Renegade?

Riptide GP: Renegade se lanzó el 26 de julio de 2016.

¿Quién desarrolló Riptide GP: Renegade?

Riptide GP: Renegade fue desarrollado por Vector Unit.