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2015年7月23日星期四

Need for Speed Shift Review

Need For Speed Shift is one of the series racing game, NFS. Here is a review about NFS Shift and 9game wish you will like it.
Image result for NEED FOR SPEED™ Shift
Need for Speed Shift doesn’t feel like an Android game. It feels like a slick, fully-realized AAA game you’d find on a console, albeit a bit shorter. You know the difference: A good Android game sometimes feels like a nice little diversion, while a console game feels more like an engrossing experience, something you look forward to coming back to. If all the cute cartoony animals from the two-stick shooters and $1 diversions that are proliferating in the App Store were crossing a highway, NFS Shift would be the roaring Lamborghini running them over.
How does NFS Shift create such deep and nuanced gameplay from the Android’s simple tilt-to-steer controls? We really thought using your Android as a steering wheel would only lead to casual racing games, but NFS Shift’s cockpit view and sensitive tilting makes you feel like you really are the driver. The controls become even more impressive as you begin to realize how different cars handle speed and steering. You can feel a noticeable difference between the driving capabilities of a tier 1 Mazda and a tier 4 Lamborghini.
To win at NFS Shift you need to learn how to drive like a pro, which means you need to know how to race courses more efficiently. But don’t worry, because NFS Shift pleasantly bridges the gap between arcade and simulation racers. The game provides you with a line on the track which shows you the ideal way to drive the course, and even rewards you with experience points if you stay on the line. The line glows red at turns to signal you to hit the brakes by tapping the screen. It all sounds pretty easy, but you’ll definitely need to know how to use these skills as the cars get faster and the turns get steeper.
You can also drift your car to victory in special drifting challenges. Drifting is the art of applying your emergency brake during turns in order to slide your car around a bend diagonally. What you need to know about drifting is that it takes a completely different skill set than winning races, and once you get a hang of it, you will feel cooler than Steve McQueen.
To initiate a drift, you need to jerk your device sharply in the direction of the turn. Your goal is to keep the drift going for a long time by keeping your car diagonal with the road. If you turn your car perpendicular, you’ll hit the wall, and if you keep it too straight it’ll be completely unimpressive. It’s an art.
The Need For Speed Shift experience is highly focused. Everything makes you want to go fast. The aggressive, screaming music augments the “drive fast, think later” feeling. How can you not want to leave some suckers in the dust when you’re listening to lyrics like “Run with wolves” and “The streets are ours”? All the menus are so touchable, we found ourselves going through upgrade and car selection screens like we raced the races: fast, with a devil-may-care attitude.
It also helps that the cars are so unbelievably sexy. From the retro badassed Dodge Challenger prototype to the hot as fire Porsche 911 GT2, we never want to go back to Burnout or GTA’s fictionalized cars ever again.
There are also driving levels to progress through, achievements to earn for feats such as drifting and overtaking other cars, and two sides to align yourself with. Are you a precise driver or an aggressive driver? Do you like running other drivers into walls or getting around them without a scratch? The game will analyze how you drive and assign you to one category. See you on the dark side.
NFS Shift is a tough game, but it’s a good tough, a tough you’ll want to push through. Sometimes the nitro button will get stuck, though, or you’ll miss a turn because of some small frame rate issues, but honestly, these are pebbles which the game crushes under its 150 mph wheels.
Even if you’re not a fan of racing games, or don’t drive to work in a Formula 1 car every day, it’s hard to not get caught up in Need For Speed Shift’s exhilarating pace.

TO read more information about Need For Speed Shift or other racing games, you can click HERE.
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2015年7月10日星期五

Some Need For Speed Shift Tips And Guide

Need For Speed Shift is one of the series racing game, NFS. Here is a review about NFS Shift and 9game wish you will like it.
Image result for NEED FOR SPEED™ Shift tips
1. Apply Brake Late: If you really want to get ahead of your competitors you should apply the brake late as soon as you hit some curve as it will gives you ample of time to overcome the curve.
2. Don’t Slide Too Fast: If you try to slide your car too fast chances are that you will be blown up in fraction of seconds and out of the race.
3. Use Drifting With Care: Drift is a great trick which can helps you to overcome the curve all at once. But always remember that your timing should be accurate otherwise you will hit the boundaries and eventually lags behind.
4. Clean Overtakes: When you really want to beat your competitors you can do some overtakes but make sure you take do them clean i.e without hitting other cars otherwise you will lag behind.

TO read more information about Need For Speed Shift or other racing games, you can click HERE.

2015年6月2日星期二

Need for Speed Shift Review

Need For Speed Shift is one of the series racing game, NFS. Here is a review about NFS Shift and 9game wish you will like it.
Image result for need for speed shift cars
The previous Need for Speed on iPhone was a hit, but the franchise as a whole on consoles was in a serious tailspin. Need for Speed Shift was a welcome reboot for the flagging racing franchise and almost every single improvement has been faithfully translated to the new iPhone edition, particularly the evolutionary nature of your driver profile through the fulfilling career mode.
No iPhone racer delivers as strong of a single-player experience as Need for Speed Shift. You start out as a driver hungry for success. With only enough cash in your account to buy a basic car, you start a 28-event career that will take you from an elimination race on the streets of Chicago to a drift battle in Tokyo. Each event you complete is tracked with an impressive experience system. You are awarded stars for event-specific performance categories that go toward unlocking additional events – you are not forced from one event to the next.
You have the freedom to try different events; maybe you will be good at all of them, but I was certainly glad that a terrible drift run in Chicago did not hold me back from graduating to London, thanks to my four-star circuit and elimination runs. Hone your skills to earn the cash needed to buy better cars and upgrades make you tough to beat. However, your win-loss record is persistent. It stares you in the face after every single event. But so do your medals and experience points.
In a way, Need for Speed Shift is a pretty solid little RPG. Competing in events awards experience points to your career total, which in turn levels you up. You do not have to win an event to get points, though. You still get some experience for competing. That experience is split between precision and aggression, which shapes your driver profile. And then with your winnings, you can upgrade your cars to either suit your current profile or make up for deficiencies, which in turn will help you bank more stars. The interconnected nature of every feature in career mode is exactly why it is so successful.
Fortunately, the great structure of career mode is backed up by great driving. Need for Speed Shift's tilt steering is wonderfully accurate and gives you the precision you need to negotiate tough corners and make tough passes. There is no universal "feel" for the cars, either. Different tiers of cars, from the first tier Mazda RX-8 to the third tier Corvette Z06 handle differently. Need for Speed Shift has multiple control settings that toggle assists, like brakes, transmission, and a useful racing line that shows you the cleanest route through a track. There are four driving views, from the impressive driver's seat view to outside the car. I actually preferred the outside view so I could easily see the racing line. You may not treat that line as gospel, but it's a useful guide for getting back on track after performing a pass or drift.
With so much focus on its single-player career, I was not entirely surprised to see multiplayer so limited. There are multiple race events to play over local Wi-Fi or Bluetooth connectivity, but no Internet play. And the lack of any online leagues or leaderboards is also disappointing.
TO read more information about Need For Speed Shift or other racing games, you can click HERE.