Better known today as the developer of Skyrim and Fallout, Bethesda once had a well-respected racing game franchise and were deep into development of a licensed Skip Barber Racing title that never released.
Shortly after the release of Grand Prix Legends the sim racing community looked forward to another title that promised to offer a similar insight into historic racing. Trans-Am Racing ’68-’72 ultimately never released, a victim of a publishers shady dealings, but as a part of my research I uncovered a VHS of a never-released trailer for the game. Watch the trailer and read about what sim racing missed out on.
Another nice update from Reiza this month mentioning updates in vehicle and track art, audio, physics, AI, and their user interface. We also got our first screenshots of that UI, a gorgeous screen of a Brabham BT44 and some other very pretty content.
They also announced their first DLC packs will include Silverstone (1975, 1991, 2001 and modern versions) and Hockenheim (1977, 1988, 2001 and modern). While it may seem strange to announce DLC packs at this stage I think their reasoning makes sense and with just under 40 unique venues and over 60 car models, I don’t think it’s unreasonable to try to generate some ongoing revenue.
It is noted as work-in-progress with some placeholder images, but here is our first look at the AMS2 user interface:
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