GVMERS: The Rise and Fall of Twisted Metal

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Or is it just one of Phil's balls in my throat?



Built by a team with limited experience in the gaming industry, the original Twisted Metal raced on to PlayStation in 1995 and revolutionized vehicular combat games. A short single-player campaign and weak graphics left much to be desired, but these flaws were easily overlooked considering fun, high-octane gameplay and a competitive Duel Mode kept players engaged for hours on end. Sony found repeat success with Twisted Metal sequels, which released at a relatively brisk pace well into the 2000s. Not all installments were created equal, though.

Developer SingleTrac helmed the first two entries, with Sony imprint 989 Studios leading production on Twisted Metal 3 and 4. 2001's Twisted Metal: Black rebooted the property after the original creators re-teamed for a comeback. In 2012, yet another reboot hit store shelves in a PS3 title directed by series co-creator David Jaffe. Its commercial shortcomings, along with the waning popularity of the genre, raised questions about whether the market still craved the likes of Twisted Metal. Sony's later attempts at resurrecting the car combat space proved futile, resulting in the cancellation of an unannounced live-service game.

However, instead of succumbing to what seemed a final death blow, the franchise reasserted its relevance through a hit TV series on Peacock's streaming platform. Twisted Metal's future in the interactive medium may have a bleak outlook, yet series faithful can at least find solace in knowing that Sony will resist letting it fade into obscurity like so many other tentpole properties introduced during the PS1 era.

This is the rise and fall of Twisted Metal.
 
Twisted Metal 2 and Twisted Metal: Black are my favorites.
Honorable mention is Vigilante 8. Not the same though, TM's characters were so unique and dark.
 
I have TM2 installed on my Pro and play it quite a bit. The controls are ass, but the gameplay is still so good.

PS3 Twisted Metal was absolutely incredible, ruined because they rushed it out with glitched online play and took forever to fix it. Wouldn't have been a big deal except that the game relied on the online play.

Vigilante 8 was also extremely good. Rogue Trip was pretty solid.
 



Built by a team with limited experience in the gaming industry, the original Twisted Metal raced on to PlayStation in 1995 and revolutionized vehicular combat games. A short single-player campaign and weak graphics left much to be desired, but these flaws were easily overlooked considering fun, high-octane gameplay and a competitive Duel Mode kept players engaged for hours on end. Sony found repeat success with Twisted Metal sequels, which released at a relatively brisk pace well into the 2000s. Not all installments were created equal, though.

Developer SingleTrac helmed the first two entries, with Sony imprint 989 Studios leading production on Twisted Metal 3 and 4. 2001's Twisted Metal: Black rebooted the property after the original creators re-teamed for a comeback. In 2012, yet another reboot hit store shelves in a PS3 title directed by series co-creator David Jaffe. Its commercial shortcomings, along with the waning popularity of the genre, raised questions about whether the market still craved the likes of Twisted Metal. Sony's later attempts at resurrecting the car combat space proved futile, resulting in the cancellation of an unannounced live-service game.

However, instead of succumbing to what seemed a final death blow, the franchise reasserted its relevance through a hit TV series on Peacock's streaming platform. Twisted Metal's future in the interactive medium may have a bleak outlook, yet series faithful can at least find solace in knowing that Sony will resist letting it fade into obscurity like so many other tentpole properties introduced during the PS1 era.

This is the rise and fall of Twisted Metal.

The Soda guy is smart, I don't care what Sony says, they can't alienate their ps1/2 fans.
 
The problem with the reboot they did is they focused way more on the cars than the people driving them. Twisted Metal was cool because each character had their own vehicle and story. In the reboot you had like 3 playable characters who could drive whatever car they wanted to. Sucked the uniqueness out of each playthrough.

It also didn't help that they had races built on a game design that didn't really play well with racing. Should have stuck with destruction or fine-tuned the mechanics for the races.
 
Never gave a shit about this franchise. I tried it on PS2 and PS3 but always kept going back to Carmageddon lol.
 
Flashbacks of trying to get into the eiffel tower. Axel losing his arm when severely damaged. And if memory serves, ricochet bomb = OP.
 
I'm more of a vigilante 8 guy, but twisted metal 2 was definitely a stand out game on the PS1. The PS3 twisted metal kind of had too small of a team for what they were trying to do right? It's too bad about the online issues. I think Jeff even called the single player unnecessarily sloppy.
 
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Twisted Metal 2 has one of the best game intros.

"Calypsoooo, what have it done?! What, have, you, dooone!!?

It's the only good Sony IP and they're fken sleeping on it
 
I have TM2 installed on my Pro and play it quite a bit. The controls are ass, but the gameplay is still so good.

PS3 Twisted Metal was absolutely incredible, ruined because they rushed it out with glitched online play and took forever to fix it. Wouldn't have been a big deal except that the game relied on the online play.

Vigilante 8 was also extremely good. Rogue Trip was pretty solid.
Also didn't include match making lol. You had to join hosted lobbies. So stupid
 
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