![]() ![]() What the hell, you can even select the Cmanual gears' option with no cringeworthy repercussions. Shrouded in anonymity by pico-photons from a 20 watt lightbulb, Sega Rally on your pc will be a far less embarrassing affair. Another benefit which springs to mind is that you don't have to go and get change from the booth, which invariably contains a tasty, slinky chick, who you can clearly tell is thinking, Get a life, geek as the pound coins clatter down the chute. You also don't have to put up with the same smartass kid jumping into the machine next to you and challenging you to a race (which you then lose, only to discover that a large crowd has built up behind you during the contest). In other words you don't have to put up with some snotty smartass kid standing by your right ear, making tutting noises as you plough for the third time into the bank of the gravelly hairpin on the Ceasy' course. The first benefit, obviously, is that you don't have to play the game in an amusement hall. Yup, the home versions of Rally piss on the coin-op in certain areas. (They said it couldn't be done, but it was.) However, as Jimmy Cricket would say, there's more. ![]() The pc incarnation of Sega Rally looks and plays exactly the same as the Saturn version, which in turn was pretty much exactly the same as the coin-op. ![]()
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