Stunts Forum

Life beside Stunts => Racing Games & Other Competitions => Topic started by: dreadnaut on July 16, 2021, 04:04:38 PM

Title: art of rally
Post by: dreadnaut on July 16, 2021, 04:04:38 PM
I've been having some fun with the "art of rally" demo (https://funselektor.itch.io/art-of-rally/devlog/133179/art-of-rally-demo). Got down to 4:01.8 on the track available.

It reminds me a bit of Stunts as you need to really learn the track to do well, to tap-tap-tap the steering to keep the car on the road, and... to set the graphics to lowest so that I can have an OK frame-rate on my 2015 laptop! And then it looks like this...  ::)
Title: Re: art of rally
Post by: KyLiE on July 21, 2021, 04:34:28 PM
Ha ha! :) That is reminiscent of Stunts!
Title: Re: art of rally
Post by: Cas on July 25, 2021, 04:38:31 AM
I only had one rally game in my life... and I think I still do. I don't remember the name right now, but if I find it, I can let you know. It was from the latest times of DOS games... maybe 1995 or 1996.
Title: Re: art of rally
Post by: Daniel3D on July 25, 2021, 08:49:11 AM
Quote from: Cas on July 25, 2021, 04:38:31 AM
I only had one rally game in my life... and I think I still do. I don't remember the name right now, but if I find it, I can let you know. It was from the latest times of DOS games... maybe 1995 or 1996.
I had Colin McRae Rally in 1998. That was my first "high end" game. I bought my own computer late 1995 to upgrade from a 286 or 386 to a Pentium.
So 1996 was the earliest I could have had Stunts.
Title: Re: art of rally
Post by: Cas on July 26, 2021, 03:43:19 AM
I got a 386 and a year after, I upgraded it to a 486DX4. This is, my mother bought those. I was too young to work, ha, ha. Later, I bought an old 286 from a friend and I upgraded it directly to a Pentium 200MHz with MMX. At this point, I stayed like that for several years. In 2005, I had my first reasonable job and I was able to afford buying a computer myself. I went for a Celeron 700MHz, which was not what people were buying then, but the Pentium IVs that were common then did not have motherboards with ISA slots and I wanted to be able to use my SB AWE64, that was DOS compatible. That was the last computer for which I really put attention to the specs. After that, I've always bought what's "average", since all computers seem to be much faster and have much more of everything that I may need for the use I give them.