C1 Circuit

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C1 Circuit
Believe it or not, they actually paid for the Bridgestone logos.
Genre(s): Racing
Platform(s): PlayStation
Release Date: October 4, 1996 (JP)
Developer(s): Invex
Publisher(s): Invex

C1 Circuit is a Japan-only street racing video game developed and released by Invex; it was released on October 4, 1996 for PlayStation.

C1 Circuit features street racing through the C1 route of the Shuto Expressway, featuring an all-Japanese car roster, albeit unlicensed.

Bad Qualities

  1. The menu sound effects (and some of the in-race music) sounds unfitting for a racing game, with selection tones sounding like a bubble; additionally, the user interface and experience appears to be lifelessly boring.
  2. The game's graphics and engine sounds are poor, even by 1996 PlayStation standards.
  3. The game's physics are generally poor. Any collisions results in the car bouncing back and forth, while drifting feels tedious and causes the engine to over-rev (at least on lower class cars).
  4. Continuing from physics issues above, there appears to be no sense of speed; you feel like you're driving half of the speed that's on the speedometer.
  5. The AI (both opponent and traffic) appears to be irresponsive and slow.
  6. Changing cars will result in all tuning parts/status being reset. (This is also an issue in Tokyo Highway Battle.)[1]

Good Qualities

  1. The game features an accurate C1 Route by PlayStation standards, compared to, say, Tokyo Highway Battle (Shutokou Battle: Drift King in Japan).
  2. The game's inclusion of the Ginza section of C1 is a rarity amongst racing games themed about Japanese highway street racing, considering it's not part of the highway.
  3. The intro CG is decent, although it may want you wonder if the developers spent more on that.
  4. There are many mechanical tuning options, as with typical JDM racing games of that era.

Trivia

  • The game features advertisements for Bridgestone tires, Elf lubricants, and Carboy, a Japanese car magazine.
  • Articles for the game appeared in the aforementioned Carboy magazine in the 9/1995, 10/1995, and 11/1995 issues of the magazine. One of these issues include pictures for a special Nissan March/Micra (K11) in collaboration with the publication, which was cut from the final game.

Videos

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