I did the first ten events and now have the first GP ready to go. Managed to get all Golds or Platinums although a few of them took several attempts to do so.
It really is Burnout 2.0 to the extent that if you'd told me it was a HD remaster of Burnout 3 I'd probably have believed you.
The controls are a bit twitchy out of the gate so I knocked the sensitivity down a couple of notches, other than that I haven't had to touch a thing (not that there are really much in the way of options anyway). The Spotify integrations works excellently, the game recommends setting Spotify to 15% volume but I ended up at 20% Spotify and 100% game effects (for some reason Spotify is 'weighted' much heavier than ingame audio, so those settings made a pleasing balance of the music being nice and clear but also being able to hear the effects).
Presentation wise it's very stripped down, but again, it reminds me of the old Burnout games, they've even got the same sort of colour schemes and layouts and fonts and whatnot, the boost bar looks the same, 'Burnouts' have been renamed to 'Heatwaves', but overall it's so reminiscent of the original games I'm half surprised EA's lawyers aren't getting their daggers out (who knows, maybe they are).
Some of your old Criterion favourites are there, like randomised traffic in time trial events, unavoidable crashes on blind corners and suchlike, and once it put me back on the track after a crash only for me to be immediately taken out again, the ruthless rubber banding of old seems to have been massively curtailed though (at least early on), to the extent that I had a crash in first place towards the end of a long race, and retained first place once I'd managed to get going again.
Graphically I think it's fine, you wouldn't get it mixed up with Forza Horizon 4, however at no point did I think 'Blimey, this is an ugly game', quite the opposite in fact. The car models are pleasing, the shinies all seem to be intact, the scenery is nice, and the framerate stays (mostly) locked at 60FPS. Apparently the PS4 Pro does better in this regard as it does 1080p whereas the 1X does 1440p so a lot more pixels to shunt around, TBH I'd have preferred an absolute rock solid 60FPS. (I would have got the game on PS4 but I really don't like the Dual Shocks as controllers.)
So after all that waffle, what about the game?
Honestly, it's great, I just had 90 minutes of solid, exhilarating fun out of it and am keen for more. All your favourite Burnout modes are here and they all work as expected, it's a pure arcade racer and clearly has no intention of trying to be anything else. There is no story, no characters, no plot, no background, no setting, nothing. There's not even much more to say about the game, if you liked Burnout 3, you'll like this. (It's not Burnout 2, and it's not Burnout Revenge, I'd peg it at Burnout 3.) It does have the Pursuit mode from NFS Hot Pursuit though.
Loading times to and from events aren't bad at all, but most importantly the time to RELOAD an event is very quick, literally just a few seconds, so if you fuck it up early doors and want to retry, you're back at the start in no time.
I will say that the Spotify integration is a big part of it though, I just lobbed Chopley's Awesome Playlist at it and enjoyed racing to some of my favourite tracks off there, remove that from the equation and it wouldn't be the same at all. Also, the music carries on playing through the loading screens, car select screens, post race screens and so on, so if a track you really like is playing, you can just chill for a moment or two and enjoy it.
I'm feeling an 8/10 kind of vibe for it at the moment, but there's probably an extra 0.5 of a point there just because it's so cool to have my own curated music collection playing along with the game, and the game might get a bit too 'Criterioney' later on, so we'll have to be wary of that, I remember both 3 and Revenge started to get a tad ridiculous with the rubber banding and margins for error towards the end of their campaigns.
It's early doors yet, but I'd say it's a safe-ish buy at £25 if you liked the old Burnout games.
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