Saturday 2 March 2013

Need for speed Most Wanted


The best game of Nfs

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Quick game
Career mode


select career mode and play some races when your car is snatched by other blacklists your career will start then . When your career is start select 15 option and play with 15 blacklists and be the no1 to beat a blacklist you need more practice and play milestones win races and make bounty given on the detail of blacklist
Connected Open World – Blaze a high score trail through the city for your friends.The next generation of Autolog displays your record speeds, times, pursuits and jump distances throughout Fairhaven City. Cruise past any speed camera, road junction, Jack Spot or jump to view its unique leaderboard, and then take a run up, hit the gas and see if you can top it. Hit the biggest air off any billboard jump, and we’ll even display your face on the billboard in their game! – a constant reminder to your friends that you are Most Wanted.
Find it Drive it – Pick a Car. Make it Your Own. Earn the right to be Most Wanted.For too long you’ve had to wait to drive the cars you love. Not anymore. In Most Wanted, “Open” means more than just open world. Practically every car’s available from the start. Explore the world. If you can find it, you can drive it.Each car has a series of events, designed to showcase its unique qualities. Master each car in your own time, in any order to earn Speed Points and rank up. Score enough and you’ll earn the right to take on 10 of the hottest cars in the game - the Most Wanted Racers. Beat them all one-on-one to become Fairhaven’s Most Wanted. Swing the odds in your favour by modifying your car with such pursuit-busting delights as: Reinforced Chassis, Reinflating Tires, Impact Protection, Powershot Nitrous or Track Tires. Customization in Most Wanted is about gameplay. Every mod changes what you can do with the car. Get the drop on your friends, your rivals and The Law by experimenting with different cars and combinations.
Make Trouble – For the cops. For your friends. For fun. Buckle up, hit the gas and hold on tight; you’re in for the ride of your life. In Most Wanted, you’ll experience dream cars, the way you always wanted them. No tracks, no circuits, and no simulation. It’s about taking your ride to the limit and beyond, nailing perfect 200 mile-an-hour drifts, slamming your friends off the road, outsmarting the cops and getting away with it in style.
Non-Stop Multiplayer —No menus. No lobbies. Just competition.Our online play is about intense competition, rank and vehicle modification. We’re into team games, variety, persistent scoring and endless rewards.Pick a car, meet up with your friends and enjoy a nonstop Playlist of competitive events. Fight for position on the start line or turn around to take out oncoming rivals at the finish. It’s online driving, as you’ve never seen it.



Need For Speed Most Wanted U

Designed specifically for the Wii U, Need for Speed Most Wanted U delivers gameplay mechanics built for the unique features of the Wii U™ GamePad controller. The local co-op mode, called Co-Driver, allows one player to drive using the Wii Remote™ controller or Wii U Pro Controller while another player uses the Wii U GamePad to provide control and navigation assistance on an interactive real-time map. Using just their fingertips, the partner can distract pursuing cops, switch from night to day or activate enhanced performance for any car and even control the amount of traffic on the road.For another competitive edge, players can switch into their favorite cars, track milestones, uncover the city’s hidden gems and more, all on the fly with the Wii U touch screen, ensuring nothing ever slows them down.

Need for Speed Most Wanted U brings the blockbuster action of the open world racer to players’ fingertips. The entire game is playable off-screen using the Wii U GamePad, so gamers never have to put the game down.

Need for Speed Most Wanted U includes the Ultimate Speed Pack expansion, so players can take to the streets with five of the most absurdly fast cars ever made: McLaren’s F1 LM, Lamborghini’s minimalist artwork, the Aventador J, the track-focused Pagani Zonda R, Bugatti’s reigning world speed champion, the Bugatti Veyron Grand Sport Vitesse and Hennessey’s savage 275 mile-an-hour ragtop beast, the Venom GT Spyder.

Finally with Need for Speed Most Wanted U, gamers are competing against the people they want to defeat most – their friends. With EA’s innovative online technology Autolog 2, the game automatically tracks and compares best race times, high scores and more. These stats are broadcast throughout the open world, fueling friendly competition and rivalries.Need for Speed Most Wanted’s online multiplayer also ups the ante for social competition. Gamers pick a car, meet up with their friends and are immersed in a non-stop playlist of action-packed events. Whether it’s competing for the best starting position, the ultimate jump, or finishing first place, if there’s something to do, there’s someone to beat. Any Speed Points earned on Wii U will add to your existing total if you are playing the game on any of the other available platforms through CloudCompete.

Wanted) is a racing video game developed by EA Black Box and published by Electronic Arts. It is the ninth installment in the Need for Speed series. The game features street racing-oriented game play, with certain customization options from the Need for Speed: Underground series. The game is succeeded by Need for Speed: Carbon, which serves as a sequel to Most Wanted.

Most Wanted has been released for Nintendo DS, Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 2, Xbox, GameCube, Game Boy Advance and is the first Need for Speed game released for the seventh generation console, the Xbox 360, as one of the system's launch titles. Another version of Most Wanted, titled Need for Speed: Most Wanted: 5–1–0 has been released for the PlayStation Portable. In May 2012, the PlayStation 2 version was released on the online virtual market, PlayStation Store, for the PlayStation 3. On June 1, 2012, a reboot of the game under the same title, was announced by the British developing team Criterion Games.
Contents [hide]
1 Gameplay
1.1 Modes
1.2 Pursuit system
1.3 Multiplayer
1.4 Cars
2 Plot
3 Characters
4 Development and release
4.1 Soundtrack
5 Reception
6 Reboot
7 References
8 External links


Gameplay[edit]

Most Wanted is like other Need for Speed games, where the player selects one car and races against a time limit or other racers to reach a destination. Police chases have once again been integrated into certain racing sessions, in which the police employ vehicles and tactics to stop the player's car and arrest the player, like Need for Speed III: Hot Pursuit, Need for Speed: Hot Pursuit 2, and Need for Speed: Carbon. As players take control of faster cars and increasingly rely on nitrous oxide speed boosts, the oxide meter now refills automatically for the first time since its introduction in Underground, and driving sequences become fast-paced and intense similar to the Burnout series.

Three distinct regions are offered in the city of Rockport, along with cycling weather. Racing events take place between sunrise and sunset, unlike in the Underground where the events took place at night. A Grand Theft Auto-like Free Roam mode is provided as in Need for Speed: Underground 2, but is still limited to Career mode, as well as pursuit-based events in other modes.

Brand promotion from Underground 2 still continues strongly, with Old Spice and the presence of Burger King restaurants, Castrol oil, Axe Unlimited and Edge shaving gel. The Cingular logo is still visible in the game's wireless communication system. Performance, body and visual parts that can be bought in the game are also from real life companies. However, Best Buy stores did not return from Underground 2.
Modes[edit]

The game provides players with three game modes. The Quick Race mode allows the player to select a car and an event and immediately start racing. The available cars and events are unlocked as the player progresses through the storyline in the Career mode. Achieving goals by winning races and performing a number of actions, dubbed "Milestones", during police pursuits, as well as a minimum Bounty are needed to advance in the storyline and race against any of the mode's 15 Blacklist racers. In the Xbox 360 version, the player is awarded with achievements each time a Blacklist opponent is defeated. Career mode introduces a new feature – the ability to win a Blacklist opponent's car ("pink slip"), bonus functions, extra cash or car parts and decors, after defeating the opponent in question. These come in the form of six markers – the rival's pink slip (which is concealed as a bonus marker), two bonus function markers, and three custom backroom parts markers of which there is a body part, visual upgrade, and performance marker ("Junkman Marker") that the player can select – of which the player can choose only two. New cars and parts are also unlocked as the player progresses through Career mode by beating Blacklist racers.

In addition to the Quick Race and Career modes, there is also a "Challenge Series" mode involving 69 progressively difficult challenges where players are required to successfully complete Tollbooth races and pursuit challenges, such as tagging a number of police cars. The pre-tuned cars used in each Challenge is fixed, ranging from mostly Career cars with poor handling to traffic vehicles such as a dump truck or police cars. Additional bonus cars may be unlocked as the player progresses through Challenge mode.

In terms of actual variations of races, Most Wanted inherits several racing modes prevalent in its Underground predecessors. The game's four existing modes, Circuit, Sprint, Lap Knockout and Drag, remain largely unchanged since the first iteration of Underground, while Drifting, Street X, Underground Racing League tournaments and Outrun racing were removed. Meanwhile, Most Wanted sees the introduction of two new racing variations, which places emphasis on speed. The first mode is known as "Tollbooth," where a player races alone to designated checkpoints along a point-to-point route before time runs out; the more time a player has as they reach a toll booth, the more time they have to arrive at the next one. The second mode, dubbed "Speedtrap", sees racers competing with each other to get the highest accumulated speed record at multiple traffic cameras. At a speed trap/traffic camera, players accelerate their car to aim for the highest possible speed. Accumulated speed is reduced over a period of time after an opponent crosses the finish line first.
Pursuit system[edit]

The player's car is in pursuit by several undercover state police cars and a police helicopter in Free Roam mode. This screen-shot also depicts the use of simulated HDRR on the sunny sky and surface lighting.

Most Wanted features pursuit evasion in the game for the first time in the series since Hot Pursuit 2. In Career mode, police pursuits may occur during a race or while free roaming through the city, depending on the frequency of the police units in the area and traffic offenses players have committed. The player can also initiate a pursuit immediately from the Blacklist Rival menu in the Safe House menu by choosing an unfinished Milestone or a Bounty challenge, or by selecting an appropriate challenge in the Challenge Series mode. Traffic offenses committed by the player are known in-game as Infractions. These include speeding, excessive speeding, reckless driving, driving off roadway, damage to property, hit and run, ramming a police unit, and resisting arrest.

The system is significantly more complex than its previous Hot Pursuit incarnations. The manner in which the police handle a player is determined by the "heat level" of the player's current car. Heat levels, which increase with the length of a police pursuit and the amount of damage caused by the player during the pursuit, add a twist to the chase: the higher the car's heat level, the more aggressive the police units are against the player, employing additional tactics and tools, such as roadblocks, spike strips, police helicopters and heavier and faster police cars such as police SUV's.

In Career mode, pursuits are integrated into the game in such a way that it is necessary to participate in a pursuit in order to be able to challenge the Blacklist racers. The player must complete Milestones which involve committing at least a specified amount of traffic offenses during a pursuit or evading the police within/after a set time, and accumulating Bounty as the player continues to evade the police or damage police units. A car's heat level may be reduced by changing its physical appearance (i.e. changing body parts or paint color) or by using another purchased car with a lower heat level to race. If a car is not being used by the player, its heat level will slowly lower over time. Rap sheets, with records such as the player's infractions, cost to state, deployed tactics and pursuit lengths, are also available for viewing by hacking into police records.

Players are provided with several additional features which are useful during pursuits. The Speedbreaker, provided within the driving interface, slows down time similar to bullet time and momentarily adds weight to the player's car allowing it to become more difficult for other vehicles to push around, and induces a drift. This allows the player a limited amount of time to quickly maneuver the car out of difficult situations, or assess an escape route through a road block or spike strip blockade.[1] Another feature in Most Wanted are Pursuit Breakers, road-side objects which are designed to collapse when a player uses their car to knock down its support, either damaging or disabling following police cars (which can be visually seen in many cases). In one example, if a player smashes through a gas station, the roof of the station falls potentially crushing police units following them.[2] There are lighter non-map visible pursuit breakers as well, for example, side swiping a log truck will release its logs onto the street, rendering some trailing cop cars unable to continue pursuit. If most of the pursuing cops are destroyed, then "backup mode" is initiated, where the second to last or last cop calls for backup. A countdown timer will appear below the pursuit HUD which designates how long until backup arrives. Longevity of the backup period depends on how far you are from the start point of the initial pursuit, and heat level.

Pursuits in the game are split into two main parts: the actual pursuit, where the player is actively being chased by police and; "Cooldown" mode, where the police have lost sight of the player but are still conducting a search. During this time, the pursuit and its corresponding timer are temporarily paused and a Cooldown bar is enabled, which will slowly fill up as time passes. Once the bar fills up completely, the player is considered to have successfully evaded the pursuit. Conversely, if a police unit spots the player, the pursuit resumes. To evade the pursuit, it is necessary to enter Cooldown mode first. This is accomplished by getting a certain distance away from the police or by disabling police units. Cooldown spots, areas in the world usually not seen from the street or helicopters, can be used to hide from pursuers and aid in the player's escape. If the player stops at a hiding spot, they will spend significantly less time in Cooldown mode.
Multiplayer[edit]

Online multiplayer was available on Xbox 360, Xbox, PC and PlayStation Portable. Up to 4 players can participate in an online race and can race in 4 game modes including circuit, sprint, lap knockout and speed trap. Furthermore, there is the option to enable Performance Matching in an online race. When performance matching is enabled, all cars in the race are automatically upgraded to match the performance (i.e. top speed, handling, etc.) of the fastest car in that particular race. However, as soon as the race is over, all modifications made to the cars by performance matching are removed. The online multiplayer lobby was shut down on August 11, 2011. However GamesRanger offers matchmaking lobbies to the user so they can play most wanted online. [2]
Cars[edit]

There are a wide range of cars available for the main Career mode of the game. Tuners return from Underground 2 (e.g. Toyota Supra, Mazda RX-7 and Mazda RX-8) while cars such as the Fiat Punto, Audi TT and Cadillac CTS are only seen in Most Wanted. SUVs, however, do not return except as non-playable police vehicles. Exotics like the Elise, Lamborghinis and Porsches make their first appearance since Need for Speed: Hot Pursuit 2 and classic muscle cars featured in the Black Edition (e.g. Chevrolet Camaro) are new to the series. As the game progresses, better and faster cars are unlocked and races get faster and more intense as the player makes their way through the game. Cars must either be purchased at car lots or won by getting the pink slip to a Blacklist Racer's car, as detailed in the Modes section. Cars can also be purchased at car lots in stock condition with no enhancement whatsoever. Not all of them are available or affordable for purchase at the beginning stages of Career mode and must be unlocked by defeating a certain Blacklist member. While the game features police cars, Most Wanted does not allow players to play as a pursuing police in chases except in Challenge mode, but are solely for checkpoint races and police pursuits, where the police are still pursuing the player.

As in the preceding Underground installments, the performance and physical appearance of the player's car can be extensively modified, but options for exterior and interior modifications have been significantly reduced to only the essentials. The customization of side mirrors, lights, exhausts and individual body kit pieces were dropped from body customization. Instead of individual body kit pieces, up to 5 whole body kits can be chosen, some of which widen the car's stance. The "Car Specialties" customization (including neon, nitrous purge, hydraulics, spinners, doors, split hoods, and trunk audio) have been completely eliminated with the exception of window tint and custom gauges. Paint customization is limited to the main body color (with mirror, exhaust, spoiler, roof scoop, and brake color options gone). Unlike the Underground games, visual customization is used to lower the car's "heat level", instead of increasing the car's "visual rating". Additionally, players are allowed to assume a sleeper appearance (leaving the exterior of the car unmodified or barely modified) for cars without penalty in Most Wanted.
Plot[edit] This article's plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed. Please help improve it by removing unnecessary details and making it more concise. (January 2014)


The game starts with the player arriving in Rockport City from his home in Palmont City after a race gathering between Palmont's top three racers who were arrested by the Palmont PD and Darius told him to leave the city. The player is a drifter, living off-the-grid and scouting for races while driving a custom-built racing 2003 BMW M3 E46 GT-R. As soon as he enters the city, a red 2003 Mazda RX-8, with Mia Townsend behind the wheel, encourages him to follow her, escalating a chase through the streets of Rockport. As they approach and stop at an intersection, a custom-built 2005 Chevrolet Corvette C6 police car pulls them over, but Mia escapes. The driver of the Corvette exits and introduces himself as Sgt. Cross, who states he is determined to stop illegal racing in Rockport for good. As he is about to arrest the player and impound his car (suspicious of the car having no street-legal parts), dispatch calls him about a pursuit across town, and he is forced to leave, but not before informing the player that "Next time, you won't be so lucky" and leaving a pinstripe scratch on the player's car with his car keys.

A few days later, the player is scouting the town when he is intercepted by Ronald "Ronnie" McCrea, a member of a local racing crew, in his banana-yellow 1998 Toyota Supra 2JZ and challenges him to a race. After easily defeating him, he is led to a local abandoned train yard, where there's a local street racing gathering. There, he crosses paths with the ruthless leader of Ronnie's racing crew, Clarence "Razor" Callahan, who drives a heavily modified, custom-body black 2005 Ford Mustang GT. He also meets Mia. Razor mocks the player, refusing to race "this nobody", but Mia defends him and suggests that they bet on a race, to which Razor agrees and bets $10,000 against him. One of Razor's crew, Toru "Bull" Sato, challenges him personally, while driving a metallic-black sleeper 2004 Mercedes SLR McLaren. To make the race more difficult for him, Razor calls the cops, but the player defeats Bull as well.

Soon after, the player goes to another local racing event, led by a mysterious guy named Rog, who drives a black and red 2004 Pontiac GTO. After the player wins the race, Rog catches up to him and tells him he is impressed by the player's skills, but then warns him to watch his back around Razor's crew before driving off upon seeing Razor waiting up ahead. Once Rog has left, Razor informs the player about "the Blacklist", a list of the 15 top most wanted street racers in Rockport. Razor lets it be known that he is #15 on the list, and because he is a Blacklist racer, the player must bet his pink-slip (bet his own car) in order to race him. Razor tells him that he will be waiting for him and departs.

The next day, he arrives at the spot to race, and Razor threatens to beat him down. As the race starts, police join the hot pursuit across Rockport, but as they progress through a crowded tunnel and lose the cops, Mia calls and informs him that he left a huge oil slick at the start line, and his car soon breaks down, forcing him to forfeit the race and, by Blacklist rules, his car as well. As Razor mocks him in front of his own crew and hits on Mia, one of Razor's crew members spots Rockport police approaching and sounds the alarm. Razor and his crew escape, but the player is arrested by Cross personally without his car and taken to prison.

The player is released because of a lack of evidence, since he doesn't have his car. Soon after, Mia arrives and takes him away to the Rosewood borough of Rockport. She explains that Razor cheated in the race, disabling his oil system, since he knew that he would lose against him. And to make things worse, after acquiring his car, he became the #1 racer on the Blacklist. Knowing the player's desire for revenge, Mia sets him up with a garage and helps him buy a car, and giving him a decoded police PDA of rap sheets of the other Blacklist drivers, while Rog, also learning of the player's misfortune with Razor, provides him with details on the Blacklist races.

As the player progresses, it becomes more and more difficult for him, having to drive against more skilled and powerful Blacklist drivers, and many of them try to take down the player in the race due to being on Razor's payroll, wanting to take the player out and eliminate any competition. Also, the player is bothered by multiple suspicions of both Rog and Mia, as Rog suspects about Mia's betting schemes on him, thinking she has an ulterior motive, while Mia suspects Rog is turning the player against her with his concerns on her actions. Worse, the player also has problems with Cross, who, due to having to release the player due to lack of evidence, has a special police crew consisting of police C6 Corvettes against racers, on his back. As he progresses to the top, he finds that #3 and #2 are none other than Ronnie and Bull, but he manages to defeat them.

As he manages to arrive to #2, he finds himself challenged by Razor himself. As he manages to finally defeat Razor and humiliate him, Razor is furious, refuses to give in his #1 spot, and forces the player to take the keys of his car back personally, revealing his true cocky, cowardly and cheating personality, but Mia snatches the keys, saying that it is over. Razor refuses to acknowledge this, and tries to take the keys back, but she overpowers him and knocks him down. As Razor's crew tries to detain her in retaliation, she reveals herself as an undercover cop of the Rockport Police Department, forcing Ronnie, Bull, and the rest to back off. Soon after, the appearance of the Rockport police helicopter, Eagle One, causes Razor's crew to panic and flee as the entire police force arrives with Cross to arrest all of the racers, having been tipped off by Mia. Mia throws the keys to the player, who escapes in time.

Soon after the player and the rest of the drivers arrive, Cross arrives and arrests Razor, but asks where the player is. Mia covers for him, saying that he got away by himself. Cross is furious about this, and asks about the other Blacklist drivers, but Mia informs him that they are through and the Blacklist is gone now. Cross, furious, demands every single unit in town go after the player before departing himself into the pursuit.

The scene shifts to the player, who is escaping from the police back in his car, while Cross informs him to give up and surrender since the Blacklist is gone and he has no chance of escaping. After a huge and intense police pursuit across the entire city, Mia calls and apologizes for lying to him, and that she was forced to be an informant to Cross in exchange for immunity, and that she used the player to arrest the members of the Blacklist, but she never wanted him to be arrested and so she let him go. She informs him about the unfinished bridge that connects to the highway that goes through the interstate leading out of town. The player heads there, smashes through the signs and manages to jump over the bridge, while the other police cars crash and fall into the valley below. Cross himself is forced to stop at the edge of the bridge, while the player heads through the highway and escapes the cops, before speeding away, departing Rockport City. The bridge soon leads him into Palmont City, where the player was before he had left to Rockport a year earlier.

Following player's escape, Cross brings up the rap sheet, and adds the player to the National Wanted list as the game ends.
Characters[edit]Actor Character
Josie Maran Mia Townsend
Dean McKenzie Nathan "Sergeant" Cross
Derek Hamilton Clarence "Razor" Callahan
André Sogliuzzo Rog
Paul Dzenkiw Ronald "Ronnie" McCrea
Kevin Ohstji Toru "Bull" Sato
Miche Sauveur Eugene "Earl" James
Rosa Mendes Isabel "Izzy" Diaz
Kari Lakomski Jade "Jewels" Barrett

Development and release[edit]

Promotional screenshot of Rockport's fall foliage of Most Wanted for the Xbox 360 with Porsche 911 Turbo S.

Need for Speed: Most Wanted 'Black Edition', a collector's edition of Most Wanted, was released in celebration of the Need for Speed series' 10th anniversary and in conjunction with the release of Most Wanted. The Black Edition features additional races, bonus cars and other additional content. The Black Edition also comes with a special feature DVD that contains interviews and videos about the game. The Black Edition was released for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 2 and Xbox in the United States and Australia;[3] only the PlayStation 2 version of Black Edition was released additionally for Europe.[3][4]

The cutscenes in the game are live-action videos shot with real actors and set pieces, and CGI effects are added to car exteriors and environments for extra visual flair. The videos are presented in a significantly different style from the Underground series, and this presentation of cut scenes is used again in Carbon and Undercover.

The depiction between all of the versions graphics-wise is not the same especially on portable versions. The Microsoft Windows version varies by hardware and can look better compared to the console versions. The recommended hardware or above has a similar frame rate to the Xbox 360 version. The game makes heavy use of the HDRR and motion blur effects to give a more realistic feel. Need for Speed: Most Wanted 5–1–0 is a PlayStation Portable port of Most Wanted, released on the same day as its console and personal computer counterparts. Similar to Most Wanted, Most Wanted 5–1–0 features a similar Blacklist 15 listing and Career Mode, with the addition of "Tuner Takedown", a "Be the Cop" mode not featured on Most Wanted. Most Wanted 5–1–0 lacks many elements of its other console and PC counterparts, like cut scenes, a storyline and a free roam mode, and contains minor differences (including listing the real name of a Blacklist racer rather than his/her nickname). The title of the game is based on the numerals "5–1–0", which is the police code for street racing.

Most Wanted, like the Underground series, avoids the use of major vehicle damage on all racing models, with only scratched paint and heavily cracked windscreens comprising the whole of the racers' damage modeling. Police cars, however, are subject to extreme physical body damages. They can be immobilized if they flip over or have been heavily damaged by "pursuit breakers" and/or the player's car. EA ceased support to the Windows version of the game very early in its life cycle. The latest patch for the Windows version (1.3) was released on December 6, 2005.[5]

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