Walt Disney World Quest: Magical Racing Tour

Walt Disney World Quest:
Magical Racing Tour

North American PlayStation cover art
Developer(s) Crystal Dynamics
Prolific Publishing (GBC)
Publisher(s) Eidos Interactive
Distributor(s) Disney Interactive
Platform(s) Sega Dreamcast, Game Boy Color, Microsoft Windows, PlayStation
Release date(s)

PlayStation

  • NA: March 23, 2000
  • EU: June 23, 2000
  • Dreamcast
    • NA: July 19, 2000
    • EU: September 1, 2000
    • Game Boy Color
      • NA: December 7, 2000
      • EU: December 15, 2000
      • Windows
        • NA: January 24, 2001
Genre(s) Racing
Mode(s) Single-player, multiplayer

Walt Disney World Quest: Magical Racing Tour is a 2000 go-kart racing video game based on attractions at the Walt Disney World Resort. Players compete in races on tracks inspired by attractions such as the Haunted Mansion, Pirates of the Caribbean, Space Mountain and Big Thunder Mountain Railroad to acquire missing parts for the park's fireworks machine, which was accidentally destroyed by Chip 'n Dale while they were gathering acorns. The game was developed by Crystal Dynamics and published by Eidos Interactive. The Game Boy Color version was developed by Prolific Publishing.

Music

The soundtrack features authentic Disney music from the attractions, with the exception of Space Mountain, which features music from the Disneyland version, and Rock 'n' Roller Coaster, which does not feature Aerosmith as the actual attraction does.

Reception

The game received positive reception. Reviewers from IGN and Eurogamer gave the game a 7.5 and 8 out of 10, respectively. Both praised the presentation of the game, and how the developers were able to recreate these popular attractions in-game, and the "Disney-esque" charm it has. Both also berated the difficulty (with the CPU racers being so hard to beat), some of the graphics, and the fact that the developers only used a small sound sample from each attraction and looped it, which got annoying quickly.[1][2]

A reviewer from GameSpot gave the Dreamcast version of the game a 7.5 out of 10, calling it a good entry to the kart racing genre, while also bringing attention to its many similarities to Mario Kart. The amount of detail put into the tracks and the sound were also praised, but the reviewer was disappointed by the game's short play length.[3]

See also

References

  1. Nix, Mark (13 April 2000). "Walt Disney World Quest: Magical Racing Tour". IGN. Retrieved 16 January 2015.
  2. Bramwell, Tom (11 September 2000). "Walt Disney World Quest : Magical Racing Tour". Eurogamer.net. Retrieved 16 January 2015.
  3. Provo, Frank (31 July 2000). "Walt Disney World Quest - Magical Racing Tour Review". GameSpot. Retrieved 16 January 2015.
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