While I enjoyed some of the challenges in the levels -and the game mechanics shift was very novel- the game required a little bit too much movement, even on the easier levels, for me to play the game as easily as I would have liked. Unlike the mobile versions of the game you’ve immediately got access to all seven of the levels from the get go. A nice touch is that you select which of the levels you want to play via arcade cabinets in the main menu. The game tout’s itself as a “80’s inspired arcade game that will make your brain melt” and while it’s not going to turn grey-matter to goo it’s certainly doing a good job of delivering that hypnotic, hot-neon, TRON-style art design that seems to have become extremely popular of late. However, part way through the level the level completely shifts, with your car becoming a mech, or a plane, or a Galaga-style spacecraft, at this point the game retains it’s simplicity although all of the levels, and indeed often the button inputs, have changed.
Each of the seven levels of the game start with a barrier dodging segment which operates on the left & right cursor keys. I rarely have the patience or timing for such games – does that make me a terrible person?Īt it’s purest Neon Drive operates on simple directional-key inputs, mainly left and right. Now, neither of those game types are anything I would normally choose to play – so shame on me for being the one who this review fell too. Neon Drive is a splicing of the timing centric dodge-em up gameplay found in Canabalt or Temple Run, combined with a rhythm-racing game.
Dodgin, blocks, pillars, space ships, heck, sometimes flying, sometimes running as an android mutation of your faithful vehicle. Welcome to Neon Drive. Put on your seatbelt, fetch your aviators and experience what it feels like to have an acid trip in an 80’s automobile while racing down an obstacle filled speedway.