Alone in the Dark, V-Rally: Infogrames, a French pioneer, shaped survival horror and racing before becoming Atari. RomWize re-ranks the publisher's best games by its re-evaluated scores, each with its current score, its versions, their rarity and their collector value.
"Driver 2 expands the formula with new cities, the ability to exit the vehicle and a more developed scenario. More ambitious than its predecessor despite some technical slowdowns. An excellent cinematic driving game that consolidates the franchise universe on PS1."
"Driver 2 expands the formula with new cities, the ability to exit the vehicle and a more developed scenario. More ambitious than its predecessor despite some technical slowdowns. An excellent cinematic driving game that consolidates the franchise universe on PS1."
"An Infogrames platformer with the Smurfs travelling the world, in the line of the first. Charming, accessible, lovely for young players."
"V-Rally Championship Edition 2 is the Infogrames V-Rally sequel with more routes, cars and better graphics. The polished driving physics on dirt, snow and asphalt is further refined. An excellent entry consolidating the franchise as a rally simulation reference on PS1."
"A polished 24 Hours of Le Mans sim offering real endurance immersion. Managing relays, tires and fatigue gives meaning. For fans of long distance racing."
"Xbox Live exclusive arena shooter based on the Unreal engine, one of the first major Xbox online multiplayer successes. Fast and fun FPS gameplay, variety of modes. One of the founding titles of Xbox Live and competitive online gaming on console."
"Stuntman delivers film stunts to chain without missing a beat. Millimetric precision, deliberate frustration and huge payoff. A truly singular PS2 experience."
"The European version of River City Ransom under the title Street Gangs. Same Technos beat'em up with RPG excellence. Street brawls, character improvement, co-op. Essential in any version."
"An ambitious western action RPG with a beefy medieval adventure and an interesting cooperative system. Controls feel rough but the scope charms. For patient western RPG fans."
"Infogrames' V-Rally 99, an official rally sim for the 1999 championship. International stages, licensed drivers and very demanding physics-based driving. The N64 visuals lag behind the PS1 version, but the driving rigour and championship fidelity make it a local reference."
"Xtreme Sports on GBC with skateboarding, surfing, snowboarding and other extreme sports. Accessible arcade gameplay in varied environments. For young players who want a colourful portable extreme sports game."
"3D platformer featuring Bugs Bunny in a colorful and well-built temporal adventure. More polished than most licensed games of its era, offering varied levels and decent level design. A good family platformer on PS1 for fans of the character."
"First 3D Oddworld exclusive on Xbox, featuring Abe and Munch as a duo. Cooperative gameplay alternating between the two characters with distinct abilities. Less good than the original 2D Oddysees but introduces the duo well. Xbox launch exclusive with strong ambitions."
"A European platformer with the journalist Spirou, by Infogrames. Charming and colourful, faithful to the comic strip, lovely for Franco-Belgian fans."
"Survival horror in the vein of early Resident Evil, with dark atmosphere and well-balanced puzzles. The dual-character intertwined story is well-constructed. Some camera issues and slightly dated presentation remain its main shortcomings."
"An Infogrames Tintin in Tibet platformer with respected comic style. Improvable handling, faithful to Hergé's album."
"Asterix on NES in a competent platformer version. Faithful to the spirit of the comics, the magic potion powers are well used. Solid for a licensed game, recommended to fans."
"A Test Drive 24 Hours of Le Mans sim faithful to the endurance spirit. Demanding driving, faithful cars and immersive long races. For patient fans."
"An Infogrames Smurfs platformer, the first entry in the Mega Drive series. Charming, accessible, lovely for young players and fans."