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"WARNING! THE FOLLOWING GAME MAYBE FOLLOWING YOU... |
Need For Madness? (also called Need For Madness or NFM) is a series of Java-based arcade-style online Vehicular Combat racing games developed mostly by Omar Waly, under the company name RadicalPlay.com.
The original game, bearing the same name as the series and often known as NFM1 to identify it from its sequels, was released in 2005. The player selects a car and stage and then competes with four other AI-controlled cars. The player wins the stage by doing any of the following:
- completing the number of laps shown at the top-left corner of the screen before any of the AI cars do; or
- wasting the other cars by ramming them.
Winning stages unlocks the later stages, and for every two stages won, a new car is unlocked.
Each car has six different properties:
- Top Speed (how fast the car goes in a straight line);
- Acceleration (how fast the car reaches its top speed);
- Handling (how quickly the car turns corners);
- Aerial Control/Stunts (how responsive the car is when doing stunts);
- Strength (how much damage it does when it hits another car and how much damage it takes when it gets hit); and
- Power Save (how slowly the Power bar decreases) or Endurance (how many hits the car can take).
While the speed of the player's chosen car, as well as the damage it does when it hits another car, is partly determined by its statistics as shown on the car selection screen, there is another mechanic that determines how fast and strong the car is. Throughout a race, the player has a Power bar that decreases constantly; a lower bar results in less speed and attacking strength, as well as reduced defence against collisions with or attacks by other cars. In order to recharge the Power bar, the player must do stunts, such as barrel rolls or vertical loops, while airborne. Combined stunts, such as a forward vertical loop combined with a barrel roll while the vehicle spins in mid-air, recharge the Power bar more than doing each stunt separately. If a stunt recharges the Power bar such that it is full, the player's car will maintain full power for approximately three seconds.
The player also has a Damage bar that fills up whenever the player collides with something or gets hit by something. If this bar is filled completely, the player's car explodes, is disabled and considered to be wasted. To counter this, there is an electrified hoop that will fully repair any car that goes through it on most tracks.
The AI cars may occasionally choose to waste the player as well, and they play by the same rules as the player.
A downloadable version of NFM1 is available at ArcadeTown.com.
In 2010, Need For Madness? Too0o!? (often shortened to NFM2) was released. NFM2 increased the number of cars in a race to seven and featured seventeen new tracks, a number of them being redesigns of stages from NFM1. NFM2 also added some additional cars to play with and unlock and introduced modifications to the game engine that resulted in a car's speed and aerial control ability indirectly determining its Power Save; as a result, the Endurance stat replaced the Power Save stat on the Car Select screen.
A multiplayer version of the series was released as a beta version on September 13, 2011, titled Need For Madness? Multiplayer! (NFMM). NFMM features all of the cars and tracks from both NFM1 and NFM2, as well as the option to play alone against the AI, or online on a local area network or the official game servers. Unlike previous games, where a track is unlocked only after the preceding track is won or a car is unlocked after every two stages, all cars and tracks are available right at the beginning of NFMM. Additional features that come with NFMM's multiplayer functions include the ability to recolour the player's car of choice, chat with other players and watch a live feed of any race in progress. Free play on the official game servers is limited to five races per IP every nine hours, although this limit can be circumvented on computers without a static IP address and does not affect one's ability to access the servers or observe other races. The five-race limit can be removed via paid registration. The game client can be downloaded from here after registration.
On 5 March, 2012, Need For Madness Single Player (NFMSP) was released as a free download. NFMSP lacks multiplayer connectivity, but features all of the cars and tracks from both NFM1 and NFM2 as well as a Car Maker, allowing the player to create new cars from scratch or edit existing cars downloaded from the Internet. Registered players of NFMM can also upload cars they make from the Car Maker into NFMM and share them with other registered players on the servers, as well as download cars shared by other players. Like NFMM, all tracks and vehicles are available from the start in NFMSP.
Further development of the Need For Madness? series can be found here, and the Facebook page for this series is located here.
The Need For Madness? series provides examples of the following tropes:[]
- The Alleged Car: Wow Caninaro tends to get this a lot. It's still better than Nimi, albeit not by much.
- Artificial Brilliance: Especially in the later stages, where the AI will actually make serious attempts to waste you if you are the race leader. The AI of the cars is improved slightly in NFM2 and knows how to make use of the strengths of each car. Sadly, it does not seem to factor in other things such as the probability of Nimi surviving a head-on collision with M A S H E E N...
- Artistic License Physics: The games were coded with this in mind.
- Beating a Dead Player: AI-controlled cars may occasionally do this to the last car they have wasted.
- Bland-Name Product: Nimi and Mighty Eight. Nimi is a Mini Cooper and Mighty Eight is an Audi R8.
- Blessed with Suck: M A S H E E N. For being the strongest car in both games (even beating out Lightning Bruiser DR Monstaa and Mighty Glacier counterpart EL KING), it is also the slowest and cannot reach the electrified hoop in a number of stages.
- Call a Smeerp a Rabbit: EL KING (a tractor unit), M A S H E E N (a wheel loader), and DR Monstaa (a monster truck). The game still calls them "cars".
- Car Fu: No duh.
- Cool Car: Radical One is arguably the coolest of the lot, with the highest Stunt rating of any car, sporting rear fins and featuring a streamlined body, allowing it to reach very high speeds. Said speeds can also be put to other uses too. Other cars that fall into this category include High Rider and Kool Kat.
- Critical Existence Failure: Overlaps with Shows Damage below. All of the cars will still perform as per normal regardless of the amount of damage they take.
- Difficult but Awesome: M A S H E E N. While it is the strongest car in the series so far, its slow speed means that most players driving it will usually see their target speeding away from them, fall short of the only electrified hoop in a stage or get hit from all sides and get wasted before they can even blink. However, it is definitely possible to use M A S H E E N to race, and veteran players can exploit the game's weird laws of Physics to push the wheel loader beyond what it can normally do.
- Do a Barrel Roll: The only way to recharge your Power bar is to do stunts. This may include actual barrel rolls.
- Enormous Engine: MAX Revenge has it.
- Every Car Is a Pinto: All the cars explode into small flames when wasted.
- Every Car Is Rear Wheel Drive: For Lead Oxide, that is. It even pivots around the rear wheels when doing stunts.
- Expy: Wow Caninaro is the Canyonero. The yellow paint job of the former is a Shout-Out to The Simpsons, which is where the Canyonero originated from. MAX Revenge is the Pursuit Special from the first Mad Max film, repainted brown; by extension, it also doubles up as a Fictional Counterpart to the Ford XB Falcon GT, which is what the Pursuit Special is a heavily modified version of.
- Fictional Counterpart: Many of the cars in the games are based on specific real-life vehicles. For example, M A S H E E N is this to a Caterpillar 966D wheel loader. See also the Bland-Name Product and Expy entries above.
- Fission Mailed / Kaizo Trap: Due to the game's simple win/lose conditions, it is possible to win a stage after getting wasted if all the other cars are wasted before you "Press [Enter] to continue" or lose a stage by getting wasted after winning by racing.
- Fragile Speedster: Formula 7 is the embodiment of this trope. Half the time, it will waste itself regardless of your efforts. Its high speed does not help, as it can completely waste itself by driving into a wall at full speed. Other examples include La Vita Crab, Drifter X and Mighty Eight.
- Glass Cannon: MAX Revenge can deal massive amounts of damage to any car in the game, even to DR Monstaa, but only when it is not being attacked and its Power bar is to the MAX.
- Have a Nice Death: If you get wasted, the highlight for that race is the part where you get wasted.
- Jack of All Stats: Tornado Shark is this near the start of both games, with medium stats for everything as compared to the other cars that do not need to be unlocked. Against all sixteen cars, MAX Revenge and Lead Oxide probably fill this position best despite the former also being classified as a Glass Cannon.
- Joke Character: Nimi is this. It is neither fast nor strong, it is difficult to control while airborne, and it tends to go in a straight line approaching corners. Nimi ties with Formula 7 for being one of the first cars to be wasted on every race, the only difference being that it is usually wasted by other cars by accident. Many players regard completing the game using only Nimi to be the ultimate test for any ridiculously experienced racer.
- The Juggernaut: With their incredibly high Strength rating and at full Power, EL KING, M A S H E E N and DR Monstaa will deflect any attack on them like a bullet ricocheting off the armoured hulk of a tank. They won't even be knocked off course.
- Lightning Bruiser: DR Monstaa and, under the right conditions, Radical One. At full Power, both cars can easily dominate every other and even go toe-to-toe with custom cars.
- Made of Plasticine: Played with on certain occasions, such as when moving cars are struck from behind and get dealt a huge amount of damage even if said impact didn't look catastrophic.
- The Maze: The second-to-last stage of both NFM1 and NFM2. The guidance arrow is disabled in the second-to-last stage of NFM1, and in the second-to-last stage of NFM2, one stretch between three checkpoints runs across the entire track, with no markers or distinguishing obstacles in between.
- Mighty Glacier: EL KING in NFM1 and M A S H E E N in NFM2. Both cars will completely waste virtually any other car if they attack at full Power and speed, but they are much, much slower than the other cars and perform poorly at stunts. M A S H E E N, in particular, takes this trope Up to Eleven. It can destroy almost any other car with one hit in NFM2 at full Power and speed, and most mid-tier cars cannot damage it unless they hit it at full Power. However, it can never pursue a fleeing car because it is so slow—even Nimi can outrun it—and its massive size and mass means that it can only do barrel rolls or tabletops (i.e. launching off a ramp and landing upside-down and then launching off a second ramp using the car's momentum and landing upright) on any obstacle taller than a dirt ramp; it can only do vertical loops if it launches off the tallest ramps in the game at maximum speed and Power.
- Pass Through the Rings: Racing involves driving under a series of checkpoint arches. You do not necessarily have to follow the curvature of the road, as the second-to-last stages of NFM1 and NFM2 can attest.
- Pimped-Out Car: Radical One. See Cool Car for more details.
- Ramming Always Works: The game inhales and exhales this trope. At full power, ramming another car will do a metric ton of damage to them while you usually get away with a scratch. However, attempting to ram another car with your Power bar below even three-quarters of full will almost always result in you bouncing off your target harmlessly and taking a lot of damage in return. You might even waste yourself this way.
- Reflexive Response: With a very high Stunt rating, your car will respond to any movements you make in the air very quickly. Cars like Radical One and High Rider utilise their high Stunt values to make up for their lack of Endurance.
- Rule of Three: At the end of a race, depending on what happened during the course of it, you will be treated to a race highlight, where you are shown one of the following three times:
- You Wasted 'em! (when a car is wasted as a direct or indirect result of you hitting it)
- Wasted! (if your car is wasted)
- Close Finish! (if you and another car finish the race close to each other)
- Stunts! (when you do at least three stunts in one pass)
- Best Stunt! (when you do two stunts in one pass but less than three stunts in one pass during a race)
- Shows Damage: Type 3. Every time you hit something, be it the ground, the flat side of a ramp or another car, whatever damage you take is shown in the physical appearance of your vehicle in addition to an increase in your Damage bar. Typically, your car will look like an Eldritch Abomination when your Damage bar is near full. Overlaps with Critical Existence Failure above, as the damage shown does not affect the performance of the cars.
- Skill Gate Characters: Tornado Shark becomes this once every car is unlocked. It is moderately decent in every field and is a good choice for beginners in the first few stages, but as with almost all of the cars available at the start of the first two games, it is eaten alive by high-end cars such as Radical One and DR Monstaa, and can be wasted by a seasoned player driving Formula 7.
- Someday This Will Come in Handy: Few players know that doing forward rolls decrease the amount of time in the air while at the same time propelling the car forwards, while doing backward rolls causes the car to fly even higher at the expense of velocity. Knowledge of this can be vital in some stages where every little extra speed boost you can get from stunts can make a difference between a close finish with you behind or a close finish with you in front, or if the extra height can mean EL KING wasting you the moment you land or you flying over it.
- Some Dexterity Required: Some stunt categories, such as tabletops, require a bit of additional thinking to execute correctly.
- Spiritual Successor: The entire series, to an earlier game developed by Waly, called Maniac Racers. Maniac Racers featured the same race-or-waste mechanics, except that the game was played from an overhead 2D perspective.
- Sturgeon's Law: This came into full effect the moment registered players were allowed to use cars they made in NFMSP's Car Maker in NFMM.
- Suicidal Overconfidence: The AI has a tendency to overestimate the durability of the car it uses. Cue Nimi driving headlong into M A S H E E N.
- Super Toughness: M A S H E E N. Full Strength and Endurance stats combined with specific physics settings that cannot be easily emulated by players in the Car Maker means that it can take an absolutely ridiculous amount of punishment from other cars (and no damage from the weakest) as long as the game's Made of Plasticine Good Bad Bug doesn't come into play.
- Take a Third Option: In many of the tracks in NFM2, an AI-controlled M A S H E E N will attempt to race if it is near the front, but once it drops to near last place, it will not continue racing, nor will it drive off-track and chase the nearest car. Instead, it will turn around and drive in the opposite direction, which will eventually put it in the ideal position to take out the race leader first.
- Tim Taylor Technology: The closer your Power bar is to full, the faster your car, the harder it hits, and the more punishment it can take. Can't overtake Mighty Eight? Fill the Power bar. Not damaging EL KING fast enough? Fill the Power bar. Getting hit too hard? Fill the Power bar. Falling short of that electrified hoop? Fill the Power bar. Can't outrun a pursuing DR Monstaa? Fill the Power bar. Want to use Radical One as a moving ramp? Fill the Power bar.
- Up to Eleven: If you are able to combine four or more different types of stunts, the game will not be able to tell you exactly what stunts you performed, instead opting to display any one of the following messages:
"Your a super star!!" |
- Weaponized Car: Sword of Justice, a police car decked out with some Boadicea wheels and razor-sharp front and side attachments.
- Xtreme Kool Letterz: Kool Kat.