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The game featured many innovations of both technology and gameplay. At the time of its release, the game was unique in that it was possible to choose the stages in which the race took place, save for the initial one. Before every [[checkpoint]], there was a [[fork in the road]], allowing the player to enter one of two different environments. (A similar branching system had been used once before in the 1983 [[Atari]]/[[Tatsumi]] racer [[TX-1]].)
The game featured many innovations of both technology and gameplay. At the time of its release, the game was unique in that it was possible to choose the stages in which the race took place, save for the initial one. Before every [[checkpoint]], there was a [[fork in the road]], allowing the player to enter one of two different environments. (A similar branching system had been used once before in the 1983 [[Atari]]/[[Tatsumi]] racer [[TX-1]].)
[[Image:Outrunsms.JPG|thumb|250px|The Desert pathway in the [[Sega Master System]] version.]]
The original ''Out Run'' is hidden inside the Xbox game ''Out Run 2'' and can be accessed by using the code NINETEEN86 and also by completing all routes in arcade mode. However, the original arcade had sprites with one translucent color, used for shadows, which is not replicated in this emulation.  The emulated version renders this color opaque.


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Revision as of 22:18, 15 June 2009

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Out Run (アウトラン Auto Ran?) (also spelled OutRun and Outrun) is a 1986 arcade game designed by Yu Suzuki and Sega-AM2. The game was a major hit with arcade-goers and is notable for its innovative hardware (including a moving cabinet), pioneering graphics and music, a choice in both soundtrack and route, and its strong theme of luxury and relaxation. In retrospective interviews, Yu Suzuki has classified Out Run not as a racing game, but as a "driving" game.

The player controls a man driving a car with his girlfriend in the passenger seat. The car is popularly perceived to be a Ferrari Testarossa convertible; however, this game did not have an official Ferrari license (unlike its sequel Out Run 2, released 17 years later). Starting at a coastal area, the player must pass through four checkpoints between five laps within a set time limit.

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The game featured many innovations of both technology and gameplay. At the time of its release, the game was unique in that it was possible to choose the stages in which the race took place, save for the initial one. Before every checkpoint, there was a fork in the road, allowing the player to enter one of two different environments. (A similar branching system had been used once before in the 1983 Atari/Tatsumi racer TX-1.)

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