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TORRENT DETAILS
Urban Trial Freestyle (3DS, PlayStation 3, PlayStation Vita) (PC Game)
The setup for Urban Trial Freestyle is pretty simple. You play as a generic motorcycle rider who has to get from point A to point B, with no context given as to why the trip has to be made.
Your only job is to utilize your bike's acceleration, brakes, and directional capabilities to get there -- it's kind of like Excitebike, but a little more puzzle-like in nature. It's a lot harder than it sounds, as the slightest mistake can send you crashing into a wall or cracking your skull open on the hard pavement.
Thankfully, there are numerous checkpoints, and pressing the triangle button will bring you back to the latest one. If you want to work your way to the top of the leaderboards, however, you'll have to make perfect runs with little to no mistakes in tow.
Basically, the hook is continuous play, through which you'll top your best scores and earn new bike mods (and outfits) through bags of cash you'll find hidden throughout the game.
To be blunt, the game is fun enough. Money is scattered about fairly generously, enough where you'll end up unlocking everything with little extra effort as long as you just play through each level.
Even with mistakes on some runs, I was able to attain at least a three out of five star rating at minimum, which allowed me to progress to new stages without much backtracking. A few hours later, I had completed everything, and basically was given the choice as to whether or not I wanted to go for as many records as I could get. Your mileage may vary, but even though I wasn't exactly compelled to go for every record, it is a decent way to spend a few extra free minutes, particularly on the go with the Vita version.
You'll trek across 40 levels, and unlock five minigames as you complete each set of stages. Well, technically there are 40 levels, but you replay the same maps multiple times to complete either the stunt or timed requirements. Fundamentally, the way you approach the repeat level is different, given the varying requirements for each set of parameters, but the repetition of exact maps is still somewhat jarring.
To mix things up a bit, you can choose which leaderboards to compete against: the world, yourself, or your friends. Appropriate ghost riders will accompany you along your travels, inspiring you to do your very best, and keep you interested.
The coolest feature of the game is the posting of the highest-scoring PSN player on a billboard, avatar and all, taunting you to do better. This was done in Need for Speed: Most Wanted as well, and it's a neat little way to increase the social element of the game without going overboard.
The entire theme is a "disaster movie" of sorts; not quite apocalyptic, but enough to cause a mass panic if these events were transpiring in real life.