DiRT Showdown Review

DiRT Showdown

By  Codemasters    Released: 25 May 12

Also on:   Xbox 360, PlayStation 3

7 out of 10

DiRT Showdown Review

24/05/2012 - 3:30pm GMT

DiRT Showdown is a surprisingly natural direction for the series to take, and series' damage modelling is more than up to the task of portraying the knockabout action and busted bonnets that the game demands and the hideous new announcer, whose ear-achingly xxxtreme voice sounds like an MTV presenter talking while being sprayed in the mouth with a hosepipe of pus, seems to be getting off on.

These full-contact automobile events, bucketed into racing, destruction and hoonigan disciplines, have you spinning around Baja, Miami, San Francisco, Tokyo and our beloved Battersea. Regardless of setting, they all live to be played with other people, mainly because the game's main focus -destruction derby style arenas - are far more engaging when played with organic life; the unpredictable nature of these scrimmages becomes entertaining instead of frustrating, as it is when you're matched against CPU drones.

There's your conventional rumble pits for rock-em, sock-em car battles, but Codemasters also adds in a few small twists to a traditional demolition derby format. Knockout is my personal highlight, which adds a sumo element as you all tussle on a raised platform, leading to frequently intense moments where you hope the boost doesn't run dry as your engine competes with a rival attempting to shunt you over edge.

Even the less aggressive match types, with many borrowing heavily off the Gymkhana inclusions from last year's DiRT 3, rely heavily on that canny mix of quick-thinking, raw skill and pure luck which always helps games thrive in a party environment. There are variants of tag, cone challenge and capture the flag, and one mode has you barrelling it around old favourites like Battersea and the Yokahoma docks as you attempt to hit an entire string of scattered checkpoints and zip to the goal before anyone else.

It's a bit of a shame to see that the attempts at a more traditional style of racing fumble and drag. 8-Ball racing has you criss-crossing around overlapping courses, pushed into central junctions where it's a question of when, not if, there will be a pile-up. But it's just a bit boring, even with other people - and while the AI does put up a good fight when you're on your own, it's a mode that doesn't sparkle like some of the others.

Still, nobody can accuse Codemasters of not attempting to cater to a wide variety of tastes - except fans of single-player racing, because DiRT Showdown in single-player is rubbish - and the amount of different game types on display is certainly impressive, though occasionally inconsistent.

DiRT's signature blend of silky smooth drifts and ultra-responsive handling is another great strength for Showdown, though it does expose one of the game's biggest problems: DiRT Showdown feels an awful lot like DiRT 3, and the effect is so overpowering I genuinely assumed the game was a cheap and cheerful downloadable title rather than a full-priced release up until about three weeks ago. There's just not quite enough meat on Showdown's bones to justify its price tag, especially with memories of its superior predecessor still fresh in our minds.

There's a scrappy little multiplayer brawler to be had with this game, then, but the fact DiRT Showdown feels a lot like DiRT 3 with a new lick of paint is both the game's greatest strength and its ultimate downfall.

Virgin Media verdict:

7 / 10 - Good
  • Gameplay: 7
  • Graphics: 9
  • Sound: 8
  • EGO engine is as lovely as ever
  • Some excellent multiplayer modes
  • Not enough to justify the price tag
  • Rubbish in single-player