Rad Racer, known in
Japan as , is a
racing game developed and published by
Square for the
Nintendo Entertainment System in 1987. It was programmed by
Nasir Gebelli, designed and supervised by
Hironobu Sakaguchi, and featured music by
Nobuo Uematsu, all of whom later contributed to
Final Fantasy in similar roles.
By 1987, few racing games existed for the NES, and
Rad Racer was seen as Square's answer to
Sega's Out Run. In Japan, it is one of the few titles for the system designed for use with Nintendo's
Famicom 3D System peripheral for
3D experience. In 1990, Square followed up with an exclusive North American sequel,
Rad Racer II. It differed little from the first version, and players considered the
gameplay inferior; as a result, it was not as successful as the first version.
The game appeared in an infamous scene in
The Wizard, where Lucas Barton (Jimmy's rival) uses a
Power Glove to play through the first stage of the game, a feat in itself considering the much noted unreliability of the device.
Rad Racer is Uematsu's 15th work of
video game music composition. One of its songs was used, with vocals added, as the theme song for Stinkoman, the
anime-parody version of the character
Strong Bad from the
Homestar Runner Flash cartoon.
Gameplay
The idea of
Rad Racer is to rally through a course, and make it to check points before the timer runs out. If a player hits a road sign or tree at any speed the car...
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