Another gaming revolution from Archer Maclean?
Wheelspin is an unashamedly old-school arcade racer, with exaggerated physics, rollercoaster-style tracks and an emphasis on enormous speed. Its influences are clear - F-Zero and San Francisco Rush 2049 are the strongest - but sadly Wheelspin never feels more than the sum of its parts.
The single-player campaign asks you to fulfill certain objectives to accumulate cash and open up the next level - these missions range from overcoming a best time to holding the racing line for a set amount of time, and only when you've met the level's requirement can you move onto the next stage. After you've beaten its primary objective however you can earn more cash by setting fastest laps, fastest overall times and collecting hidden spanner icons, with your hard-earned money coming in handy when upgrading your car's speed, acceleration and grip.
Races take place in a wide range of areas, with the traditional ice and space levels making appearances early on, but the courses themselves show more imagination, with plenty of loop-the-loops, enormous jumps and corkscrew sections. Most notable about the course design is the lack of barriers or bumpers around the vast majority of the tracks - imagine Rainbow Road and you're halfway there. This has the understandable side-effect of making you fly off the course at a moment's notice, so you get used to respawning quickly; in fact, respawn is mapped to A, giving you some indication of how often you'll need a restart. The auto-respawn usually puts back just before your deadly accident, but if you fail the same section a few times it will mercifully move you forward to the next section.
The game controls as you'd expect - you slot your Remote into the familiar Wii Wheel, steer by turning it and (in the game's words) press 2 to go faster and 1 to go slower. There's nothing wrong with the implementation of the wheel, but the way the cars handle is cause for concern and only magnifies the respawn issue. You'd expect an arcade racer to play hard-and-fast with physics, but Wheelspin tosses your cars about like an upset infant, flinging you into the abyss if you so much as graze the curb or tilt slightly.
Although the previously referenced San Francisco Rush was also fond of flipping your cars, at least it included wings to help you right your car, whereas Wheelspin repeatedly clips your car about giving you no option but to take another respawn. Couple that with the course design that sees you driving through rotating barrels with chunks in them, loop-the-loops followed by sharp turns and a fondness for other dastardly design and you're left with a racer that infuriates much more than it excites.
The version we played seemed to cry out for some decent playtesting, and it certainly dampened our enthusiasm for what was shaping up to be a fun and straightforward arcade racer. Hopefully the eight-player local play will be as fun as it promises and paper over some of the game's cracks.



1. pixelman
27 Oct 2009, 17:23 GMT
Hmm, this is out in NA already, isn't it? I seem to recall seeing it at our local Best Buy.
2. Prosody
27 Oct 2009, 17:28 GMT
Yep, it's out in the US under the name Speed Zone, but it's not out in Europe for a while yet
3. Machu
27 Oct 2009, 17:59 GMT
I've had an eye on this for a while, I love futuristic racers me, and there aint enough of 'em about. But, it looks pants (for Wii), and as I keep reading has the controls to match. I really wanna give this one a chance though, and may do if it's cheap.
4. Chrono Cross
27 Oct 2009, 17:59 GMT
Looks pretty bad and with this under Bethesda's name. makes them look bad.
And on top of it all this is their first Wii title.
5. Sean Aaron
27 Oct 2009, 18:22 GMT
2nd. Bethesda's first Wii game was Star Trek Conquest!
6. shake_zula
27 Oct 2009, 18:31 GMT
Sounds pretty good to me
7. LEGEND MARIOID
27 Oct 2009, 19:44 GMT
I'm not too enthused about this so far.
8. i8cookie
27 Oct 2009, 22:25 GMT
screen shots make it look pants. When is FZero Wii coming!?!!?!?!?!!?!!
9. shake_zula
27 Oct 2009, 22:48 GMT
@i8cookie: It looks good in motion, just check YouTube
10. lanafire7
28 Oct 2009, 00:30 GMT
review w/menu & gameplay: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UG2ssk4vyq4
gametrailers gameplay: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U4461mke3gM
edit - @machu you're welcome. btw, I also agree w/1st person view, it immerses me more into the game, also makes dodging traffic in Burnout easier. I like "hotwheels beat that" (yes, but the tracks are narrow & a lot of turns, so not easy w/sensitive tilt or nunchuck) also because the environment flips when you do on single player (not on multi player).
11. Machu
28 Oct 2009, 01:09 GMT
^ thanks.
Having watched vids I take my comment about the visuals back, they'll do nicely. It does look wonderfully infuriating, which I like. Do you know if it has a 1st person view James?
12. y2josh
28 Oct 2009, 07:41 GMT
Publisher in America was Deton8
13. Prosody
28 Oct 2009, 08:08 GMT
@Machu - not that I know of. The only buttons I didn't press were - and +, so it's possible, not that you'd want one as the courses are so twisty-turny you'd be throwing up in seconds.
14. Machu
28 Oct 2009, 12:00 GMT
Aha! But that's what I'm looking for. I play most racers in 1st person, even GX, the only ones I don't are rally, where I need to see my a55.
I fear this is gonna get panned, but if I see it for £20 I may risk it. Thanks for teh info.
15. i8cookie
30 Oct 2009, 10:35 GMT
@shake_zula: had a look. sorry man this looks awful, looks like a really terrible ps1 game. I think it's an insult to compare this to fzero. Looks more like a mario kart rip off with extremely bad art design, and a lame trying to be cool effort to get people interested with missiles and explosions.
16. rikkit
31 Oct 2009, 19:10 GMT
@Machu. Wheelspin is not worth £20. It's not worth anything /near/ that. The graphics are disgusting: it looks like a badly coded PS1 game. And the tilt controlling is awful.
Leave A Comment
Please login to post a comment.