![]() The game provides no support for peripheral controllers of any kind, and there isn't even an option to edit the default keyboard controls in any manner. Big Rigs' controls essentially involve hitting the arrow keys of the keyboard in the desired direction and nothing more. Even if this were the case, the game still wouldn't be worth playing in the slightest. So unless you especially like seeing a winning-screen over and over again that reads "You're Winner!", there is absolutely no point in playing Big Rigs.īut let's assume for a moment that the AI trucks actually worked, and you could get a race going. This is to say, actually, that none of the game's races have a purpose because there's no competition and no time limit. It's right there next to you at the beginning of a race, but it has no purpose in the game. ![]() The supposedly computer-controlled truck you're supposed to be racing against in the game never actually moves. However, Big Rigs can't even get this basic concept right. ![]() You then compete against another truck in a simple checkpoint race. The basic idea in the actual game is that you pick one from four vaguely different trucks and then one from five vaguely different levels. In fact, there really isn't anything much in the game. Let us make it very clear that these statements are all horrible, horrible lies. ![]() At least, this is what the back of the game's box would have you believe. In theory, Big Rigs is supposed to be a racing game based on big trucks that speed through various US trucking routes in some kind of effort to deliver cargo before the competition gets there first-or else the truck gets busted by the law. Now Playing: Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing Video Reviewīig Rigs' first and most grievous issue lies in its gameplay. By clicking 'enter', you agree to GameSpot's
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