Luckily, the character the player chooses is also armed with his or her own weapon that can do equal damage. This combat racer puts players in charge of their choice of four distinctly different racers in an all-out race from start to finish, trying to stay upright on a bike while getting whaled on by the opposition. Road Rash: Jailbreak builds its game design upon the formula established in past Road Rash games, but constructs its own creation with the speed, intensity and gameplay elements expected in today's gaming day and age. Development on the game was handled by European developer Magic Pockets, who obviously used its knowledge and technology acquired the visually impressive F1 2003 GBA title for Electronic Arts and DSI Games. Road Rash: Jailbreak borrows its namesake from the last game released on the PSOne system a couple years ago, but other than lifting a few assets from that development, the GBA game is really its own design. Six locations, two different difficulty levels.It's over a little too quickly, but it's a heck of a ride while it lasts. Road Rash: Jailbreak for the GBA handheld is fast and furious, and actually poses a challenge throughout its six tracks and two sets of difficulty levels, and offers a nice variety of gameplay options for such a simplistic game concept. Which is why it's surprising that I actually enjoyed playing DSI Games' rendition of the series on the Game Boy Advance.
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