Twisted Metal

released on Nov 05, 1995

Twisted Metal consists of a series of arena-based battles against an increasing number of opponents in increasingly large arenas. These battles culminate in a face-off with the winner of the previous year's competition, Darkside, who drives a large armored car which fires multiple missiles at once. Players can choose one of 12 different vehicles with which to enter combat. Each vehicle has a distinct driver and special move. The controls consist of accelerator, brake, "tight turn" (essentially a handbrake) and turbo on the face buttons, with main weapons and machine gun selection and control on the shoulder buttons. Arenas are populated with weapon pickups to re-supply missile stocks, repair stations for repairing damage to your car, pedestrians, and course stewards armed with either machine guns or missile launchers.


Also in series

Twisted Metal: Small Brawl
Twisted Metal: Small Brawl
Twisted Metal: Black
Twisted Metal: Black
Twisted Metal 4
Twisted Metal 4
Twisted Metal III
Twisted Metal III
Twisted Metal 2
Twisted Metal 2

Released on

Genres


More Info on IGDB


Reviews View More

Roadkill was my favorite. Really wish this game had a single battle option.

Twisted Metal was real rough around the edges but I was so into this game and the lore of it all and I beat it with every character and everything.

This is one of those fun edgy games. The concept is fun but I will say that the future games figured out the formula more. This is the kind of game your neighbor would have growing up and insist it's the best thing ever.

A brilliant concept. Excellent environment and tone. I loved that every character and every car had a nice backstory. But the control is extremely bad.

A brilliant albeit clumsy proof of concept that does just well enough to warrant a sequel that can iron out the wrinkles. They absolutely should've kept the cheesy live action endings in.

It’s aged like dirt. There’s some fun to be had if you played this as a kid. I lost countless hours playing it with my dad in the 90’s, but man have times changed and this was more fun as a time capsule than it was as a game. Getting to the platinum was a chore.