About this app
Dangerous Driving knows exactly what it is and what it wants to achieve. It’s an arcade-style racing game from some of the minds behind Burnout, where you can shunt opponents into walls, powerslide around corners at ridiculous speeds, and rarely let go of the boost. Dangerous Driving is, in many ways a game living in the past, taking much of its inspiration from a genre that has rarely evolved, or even released many new games, over the past decade. It’s also one of the most entertaining racing games I’ve had the pleasure of playing in years.
Set amidst a diverse collection of national parks in the United States, Dangerous Driving is divided into distinct racing classes, each based on a particular car type. Starting out with Sedans, you’ll unlock more and more cars and classes by completing events, of which there are nine different kinds. Some, like Race, simply task you with racing against other drivers to see who can finish first, while others, such as Road Rage, have you competing to see how many cars you can destroy in a set amount of time.
The tracks themselves, of which there are over thirty, range from snowy forests that lie beside cold lakes to rocky canyons that twist and turn every couple of hundred feet. They’re a diverse lot, and even though you’ll end up racing the same courses again over the length of the game, they never get old. Levels are lovingly rendered, and the tracks themselves are challenging yet entirely fair in design. Coupled with the game modes, which can radically affect how you approach a given track, along with Dangerous Driving’s game-changing feature, and you have a well-designed set of courses that are always fun to speed through.
First off, let me be the first to say that listening to the hits of Celine Dion does not make for a great soundtrack to listen to in a game where you are frequently driving over 200 miles an hour. Jokes aside, the biggest difference between linking to Dangerous Driving and merely listening to a playlist through your console or PC is that you can change your tracks or pause a song with a simple button press. Some of the features you’ve might expect from similar racing games, such as pausing the track when you’re in a loading screen or slowing it down when you’re in a crash, aren’t present here. Apart from that, it’s a feature that mostly works, as I already enjoyed setting my own soundtrack in other racing games as opposed to listening to the included one. It’s also very intuitive, and apart from logging into a computer to set it up, track and playlist changes are easy to pull off. You’ll also need Premium in order to use this feature properly, and there is a 30-day free trial if you’re not a subscriber.
Even beyond the copied modes and basic gameplay, Dangerous Driving wears its chief inspiration on its sleeve proudly. It’s difficult to talk about Dangerous Driving without comparing it to Burnout. Not only is it developed by Three Fields, which was founded by former members of Criterion Games who worked on the Burnout franchise, Dangerous Driving evokes Burnout from the moment you the start menu. From the font to the design of the user interface, to the loading screens, to how the cars drop down from the ceiling as you select them, Dangerous Driving screams Burnout. It’s as if it has been pulled directly from Burnout 3: Takedown. With the lack of traffic-checking, which was introduced in Burnout Revenge, and the absence of an open world, Dangerous Driving feels like Burnout 3.5.
Disclaimer: This is NOT an Official App but simply made by a group of Dangerous Driving fan and is only intended for educational and informational purposes.
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