Dr. Robotnik’s Ring Racers pulls no punches
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
After 5 years in development, a long-awaited Sonic fan game has finally launched under the title Dr. Robotnik’s Ring Racers, and it might just be the wildest kart racer I’ve ever played.
Dr. Robotnik’s Ring Racers, which you candownload here, effectively looks like a souped-up Super Mario Kart, with sprite-based racers driving through 3D environments. But this thing goes far beyond anything that the SNES was capable of, with massive, sprawling tracks in varied environments. The very silly promo trailer below promises “200 crazy courses with over 20 unique items,” and I’m not about to doubt it.
It’s alsodensewith mechanics. There’s a drift system, plus a ring currency that you have to track in order to execute certain moves with your car. There’s an e-brake that can lock your car in place, a spin dash you can use to boost from a standing position, trick pads that let you choose different types of boosts to activate, an item roulette that you can hit to get whatever power-up you want, and a whole lot more.
That all leads to the biggest roadblock to enjoying Ring Racers: its 45-minute tutorial. It’s a lot to learn all at once, and it’s not helped by the novel’s worth of dialogue you’ve got to read in order to get through it all. The dialogue is charming, sure, but kart racers tend to be a pretty pick-up-and-play genre that you don’t expect a lengthy preamble for. It’s a bad first impression, and one that early players are roasting pretty mercilessly.
That being said, the responses to the game itself seem pretty positive, and I didn’t feel like I needed a PhD to enjoy the one race I was able to play before my editors started urging me to get back to work. And it’s got the most important feature for any kart racer, too: multiplayer, including both 4-player splitscreen and 16-player online options.
Ring Racers builds on a lengthy Sonic fan game legacy going back to Sonic Robo Blast 2, a 3D, sprite-based platformer based on a source port of the Doom engine which was first released way back in 1999. That eventually spun off into a kart racer called SRB2Kart, and Ring Racers is a sequel to that game.
As the devs explain in therelease announcement, “Thousands of hours of work - from the core development team, our dedicated tester team, the SRB2 development team, community contributors, independent musicians, and our volunteer moderators across the various community hubs - have culminated in this artifact of passion and dedication.”
Sign up to the GamesRadar+ Newsletter
Weekly digests, tales from the communities you love, and more
If you’re used tonews of Nintendo lawyers, you might already be counting down to an inevitable DMCA fromSega. But historically, Sega has been quite friendly to Sonic fan games. Perhaps the best example is the excellent Sonic Mania, whose lead developer Christian Whitehead came to prominence developing unofficial Sonic projects. Here’s hoping the company is similarly tolerant of Ring Racers, because it deserves to hang onto its audience.
A speedrunner just beat Need for Speed: Most Wanted’s world record by 90 minutes - by using Half-Life’s Gordon Freeman instead of a car
210 days after Nintendo shut down the 3DS and Wii U online servers, the last connected player finally signs off after his console crashes: “It’s over”
Star Wars actor Daisy Ridley’s new heist movie gets first trailer, and it looks Die Hard mixed with Mission: Impossible