And unless you\'ve played GTR, which - albeit in a different era - is remarkably the same as GT Legends, you might have some learning curve issues with Legends (GTR\'s was also very high). In this respect, GT Legends does it well. GT Legends is basically what we\'ve come to expect in a racing game: qualify, race, earn money, buy car, rinse, repeat. There\'s a lot to love, especially if you have a fetish for accruing money - and who doesn\'t - and spending it collecting garage-fulls of cars. There are some familiar favorites that racing game fans will recognize immediately, notably the Porsche 911, the Ford GT 40, the AC Cobra, the Ferrari 275 GTB/C. GT Legends doesn\'t have the greatest presentation and its jump-in-and-play ideology might turn some off (especially with the heavy difficulty curve), but give it an hour or so and I\'m sure that your affection for it, as did with me, will grow.įeaturing 95 autos from the twenty-year span, GT Legends grabs for the classic lover in all of us. They\'re the days of thunder, and for a racing fan, this is awesome stuff. The 1960\'s and 70\'s of the golden age are defined by fast, blocky cars. In GT Legends, from the same company who brought us GTR, you return to the Golden Age of motor sports, an age you\'re not too likely to remember if you were born after the premier and cancellation of the Andy Griffith Show. A Time When Cars Were Cars, and Men Were Men Who Drove Cars:
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