Sega Rally 2

Sega Rally 2

released on Feb 01, 1998

Sega Rally 2

released on Feb 01, 1998

Sega Rally 2 is the sequel to Sega Rally Championship. It was released in 1998 in the arcades and was later ported to the Dreamcast and PC.


Also in series

Sega Rally 3
Sega Rally 3
Sega Rally Revo
Sega Rally Revo
Sega Rally 2006
Sega Rally 2006
Sega Rally Championship
Sega Rally Championship

Released on

Genres


More Info on IGDB


Reviews View More

Shimmy shimmy yay, shimmy yay, shimmy ya (drank)
Swalla-la-la (drank)
Swalla-la-la (swalla-la-la)
Swalla-la-la
Shimmy shimmy yay, shimmy yay, shimmy ya (drank)
Swalla-la-la (drank)
Swalla-la-la (swalla-la-la)
Swalla-la-la

One of the OG games for racing and rallying in particular. God bless playing with the Lancia Stratos at home. Music was great, and I will always remember the voice of the copilot.
All the tracks were so much fun and all the car models are legendary in my opinion.
GOAT of the arcades.

First of all, in my CMR review I praised that game for its handling-tweaking abilities. Playing Sega Rally 1 and 2 made me realize that CMR did not invent this, and I'm having a suspicion Sega Rally didn't either. Whoever came up with it, it's always a welcome feature, and while it was quite primitive in the original, here it is sophisticated enough to add some variety to the game. Although, of course, it doesn't have nearly the same effect as in CMR, since the handling there is extremely responsive, and any tweaks to it alter it significantly. Whereas Sega Rally 2 has a pretty simple and limited handling. In fact, it's this game's biggest flaw.

While the original Sega Rally played relatively normal, this one places a much stronger emphasis on the drifting. It feels like drifting is 90% of what you're doing here, and these are long, OutRun-esque drifts. This kinda thing can work, but here it's so overdone that you feel like you're driving on oil. Cars are always either underresponsive or overresponsive. It's not nearly as bad as in the Ridge Racer series, in fact it's still quite playable, but nevertheless feels like a huge downgrade from the first game, which had a decent handling. While in CMR it felt rewarding to make difficult turns, here it feels more like luck. Furthermore, this unhinged drifting distances the game from reality so much that it doesn't even really feel like rally anymore. Among other problems, in my review of the first game I mentioned how I didn't mind the timer since I never ran out of time, but here I did on numerous occasions, and it feels incredibly frustrating.

Another big downgrade are the visuals. While not bad by any means, they're pretty unremarkable, especially compared to the first game. The music is great though, just as in the first game. Though impo its optimistic and energetic tone clashes with the now more realistic and blander visuals.

Honestly, even though I should be a bigger fan of this than CMR, I'm not. Despite being a simulator, CMR wins me over with its immersiveness and amazing handling. Sega Rally 2, however, is still more "fun" than the original CMR, due to its exaggeratedly high speeds and and energetic music. But I will take either CMR 2.0 or the original Sega Rally over it any day.

Being a "Sega kid" growing up following Am2 and Am3's arcade releases on model 1, 2 and 3 boards this seemed like the pinnacle to me and it was available to play at home. Saying that I had a Sega Rally 2 Obsession would be an understatement, the constant need to improve my times, shaving tenths of my best times especially "Muddy" on Hard in the Lancia Delta HF integrate, I have revisited it recently and I gladly no longer feel the insane desire to improve on my obsessions best times but still very enjoyable.

fun racing game tbh. really engaging in all sorts of aspects, and while the controls are slippery, its rally racing so of course thats gonna be the case. the game has really good difficulty in that its very easy to clear the 10 year championship mode on its own, but to actually win 1st place in all the events will definitely require a time effort to get good enough to do so, so both casuals and hardcore players can play it and be satisfied by the end, which is great. The soundtrack is also like surprisingly really good man what the hell. I do know the dreamcast version of this game kinda chugs at points but I still found it quite playable. Banger game, love sega racers