If you have a tendency to rage quit and throw controllers, Trials Fusion may not be for you. Sometimes satisfaction is only found after hours of failed attempts, but the ease of giving it "just one more try" can be absolutely engrossing. The game’s outside-the-box goals are brimming with creativity, and the uncompromising level design pushes you to keep digging deeper to conquer every roadblock in your path.
Utterly addictive but It's too unpredictable to maintain the fun factor. The physics are too **** games asks you to roll a ball down a hill in a perfectly straight line except occasionally not too perfectly, else you'll mess it up. It punishes you for being good and for being bad. It challenges you to master chaos. Its worth playing for fun. Just dont try too hard to master it. It will come to you in time. With 60fps you can fail 60 times every second. Or kick-ass 60 times a second.. Torturously nuanced. Brazenly difficult. A game for gods PS: Learn to bunny hop
Lo primero a tener en cuenta es que este juego necesita una cuanta psn en ps4, ya que sino es un juego de 10 horas, pero si la tienes es un juego INFINITO ya que los usuarios se dedican a crear pistas unas 30 al día y ya hay mas de 160.000 lo quei lo convierte en un juego perfecto para echar una partida rápida siempre en una pista distinta. mas de 100horas jugadas y me gusta como el primer día.
There’s something uniquely thriling about all the crazy futuristic touches in Trials Fusion, with sliding platforms and hoverships and weird purple alloys and force fields. I say that I couldn’t care less about all the customizable constume bits, but I still find myself playing dress up with my motorcyclist. I mean, I paid to unlock those costume bits, so I might as well use them.
Trials Fusion is a worthy successor to Trials HD and Trials Evolution. It sticks to the same formula of those games and adds amazing new minigames and fantastic new skills to it. It doesn't quite live up to the full next-gen potential, but it is still a very fun game, where you can put lots of hours trying and failing.
Hardcore Trials fans have probably already bought and completed this game, but for others who may be curious and haven't jumped in yet, I'd recommend either of the others before this one.
This is the first trials game I have bought and I absolutely love it. You really get a chance to notice your improvement on this game, more so than many other games. The game goes from easy to hard to the ridiculous, but there is plenty of tracks for all skill levels, especially with the excellent track creator and unlimited creativity of the community. Great fun with friends and solo, I have developed a real soft spot for this game and would definitely recommend it.
There's not a whole lot to say as there's not a whole lot to the game. There is a "campaign mode" which has you travel to tracks which take a minute at a time to beat on average to earn a Gold medal. There is no story mode.
The gameplay is press the gas while you lean forward or back on your bike. The game is a side scrolling racing game on rails. You can only move forward and can't position your bike along the "track". There are more movement options on Excitebike for NES than this game has.
There's no on-line multiplayer, only couch which I did not try. The on-line tournaments feel like an extension of campaign as you stack your times up against other people.. but none that you play against live.
The "announcers" repeat mostly the same lines on each course. If you're having a hard time with a course, prepare to hear the same speech numerous times.
The graphics are really nice and your friends names showing up as you race is a cool feature so you know where you stack against those on your friends list. You can also customize your biker, which seems mostly worthless in a racing game where no one else will ever see you on a track with the lack of good multiplayer.
In all, even the graphics and cool features can't help the repetitiveness of the audio and the gameplay.
It's late at night, my head is pounding, and I'm trying to figure out just what ruined this game so badly. To spare you a mindless rant, I've decided to separate my opinions into normal categories.
Graphics: 7/10. A very pretty game, with lots of action going on in the background and crisp visuals up front. The explosions and other effects looked very decent. However, the horrid graphical glitching (pixelatwrion and major texture pop-in) really pull you out of the game. Not only that, but they'll ruin your run of a level if they appear in the wrong spot.
"Story": 1/10. If I didn't know better, I would think that there wasn't a story to this game. Turns out, the so-called "announcers" are trying to tell you something. What that is, I'll never know. For the most part, there mindless droning on about everything under the sun will make you want to shut them up more than actually listen to them.
Gameplay: 4/10. Don't get me wrong, I love Trials. I've sunk at least 400 hours into Trials Evolution, and gotten almost all the gold medals. This game is no Trials. The learning curve spikes with about 16 levels left, and it is harsh. But not harsh because the levels were cleverly made (they were all pretty **** really), but because the controls have been absolutely **** upon. ALL of the bikes feel sluggish and unresponsive, not ever even coming close to the twitch-control gameplay of **** whole trick mechanic is completely broken, like trying to give someone a surgery with a rotten mango. The tricks just did not work at all. Overall, the horrific gameplay really did make me want to cry.
Audio: 6/10. The openong theme is... meh. This is better than Evolution's start up theme though. The rest of the audio however, consists of maybe 2 songs. They loop ENDLESSLY, and I had to turn them off entirely within an hour. The bikes did sound pretty nice though, with a better rumble to them this time around.
Overall: 4.5/10 This game was the worst possible scenario. Unbelievably short, and repugnantly awful until the end. Don't give in to your temptations; avoid this game like the plague.
SummaryTrials Fusion melds the classic, proven Trials formula of simple yet addictive competition with the social and visual breakthroughs of the next generation of gaming.