
But you won’t have to wait for long-the game crashes, freezes, and locks up your computer, forcing restarts. As cars and trucks get crushed, the game screeches to a halt, leaving you to ponder the game’s fragile state and wonder just when it will all fall apart. One map in particular, a small arena with a large metal saucer that periodically drops on any hapless vehicles below, is nearly unplayable.
The frame rate struggles to stay around 30, occasionally diving to create something akin to a Red Asphalt slide show at times, it sputters and chugs worse than a 1970s-era Chevy truck left to rot in the backyard. The game would be mediocre at best, but a host of serious performance issues and slippery controls ultimately leave enjoyment idling in the garage, choking on fumes.Ĭarmageddon: Reincarnation has many problems under the hood, but clunky performance is worst of all. Carmageddon: Reincarnation attempts to bring that game back to life, but it does little to improve on the old formula, and the result feels out of its time.

You raced and killed your way to victory in one of many exaggerated vehicles, each of them strapped with rough blades, spikes, and other nasty parts, as you wrecked opponents and turned mobs of wandering pedestrians into chunks of flayed meat. It was one of those oft-declared “violent games of the ’90s,” featuring enough wanton carnage to attract the ire of hand-wringing parents, politicians, and censors. Carmageddon, released in 1997, was a bloody and entertaining car combat racer for its time.
