![]() Unlike every other recent Milestone bike game, which offered three Standard, Semi-Pro and Pro difficulty levels, the physics in Monster Energy Supercross have been streamlined to two options. There’s a level of depth that past supercross games have often lacked. Get it right, though, and learning when to feather the throttle and lean the bike to navigate a set of jumps and whoops without losing speed is extremely rewarding as you develop a rhythm. Approach or land the jump at the wrong angle, and you’ll almost certainly fall off your bike. Case a jump, and you’ll lose momentum and struggle to keep up with opponents. Jumping with joyĮqually pivotal is how you approach each jump, as you need to adjust your speed, angle, and weight distribution accordingly using a combination of the triggers and two analogue sticks. Watching 22 riders pile into each other on the first corner and hurtle off their bikes on the first jump is thrilling in real life, and the game captures the sport’s intensity extremely well – you’ll soon learn that getting a clean start and avoiding the ensuing first-corner chaos is crucial. ![]() It’s a decidedly different, more technical style of racing than MXGP. ![]() In contrast to MXGP’s wide open dirt tracks, races in Monster Energy Supercross take place in narrow stadiums filled with spectacular jumps to test your skills. But you’d be wrong – this is more than just an MXGP 3 reskin. Significant for being the first officially licensed Supercross game in many years, a sport that’s hugely popular in America, on the surface, you’d be forgiven for thinking Monser Energy Supercross is a rushed rehash of MXGP 3, the last dirt bike game developed by Milestone released last year. Monster Energy Supercross – The Official Videogame continues Milestone’s monopoly of licensed bike games in addition to the annual MXGP and MotoGP series. Game: Monster Energy Supercross – The Official Videogame
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