Need for Speed: Most Wanted - A Criterion Game Review

It's not quite the smooth, finely tuned speed machine it could have been, but Need for Speed: Most Wanted is still an exciting racer.

The Video Review

Carolyn Petit tries to shake off the law and dominate the streets of Fairhaven in this video review for Need for Speed: Most Wanted.

Vehicles glide along invisible roads in the sky. Cars are borne out of twitchy, twisty clouds of darkness. Groups of police cruisers perform coordinated donuts, twirling about like dancers in a Busby Berkeley musical. In the creative and unusual pre-race sequences throughout Need for Speed: Most Wanted, you get the sense that the city of Fairhaven is a surreal land with dreamlike logic that might allow anything to happen at any moment. It's striking, then, that the actual game here is so typical and unsurprising, and that although it delivers plenty of the hard-hitting, white-knuckle racing Criterion is known for, it doesn't do so quite as well as some of the studio's earlier games.

Some cars are well-suited to street racing and eluding the police. This is not one of them.

The first game Need for Speed: Most Wanted may make you think of isn't a Criterion game at all; it's Need for Speed Most Wanted, the 2005 game with almost the same name. But while both games take place in open-world cities and involve plenty of police chases, the similarities aren't as significant as you might expect. One of the earlier game's most memorable elements was its hilariously over-the-top tale, told using some cheesy cutscenes, of a newcomer to the city of Rockport who has a personal vendetta against local street racer Razor Callahan. The premise gave you a terrific motivation for rising through the ranks of Rockport's street racing scene and taking Razor down.

Here, you also have the goal of defeating a number of street racers, but there's no narrative to back it up. The 10 racers on your list are identified only by their cars--they don't have names or faces or personalities--and without a personal investment in defeating them, doing so isn't nearly as satisfying here as it was in the 2005 game. It is merely a structural hoop to jump through; you do it simply because the game tells you that this is what you are supposed to do.

Well, that and the fact that driving, racing, and eluding the police are really enjoyable, for the most part. If you've played Criterion's earlier Need for Speed game, 2010's Hot Pursuit, the handling here will feel immediately familiar. Despite the stable of real-world cars, the driving isn't realistic. Cars have a great sense of weight and momentum to them, while still being extremely responsive, and as you'd expect from a Criterion racer, judicious use of the brakes and a bit of practice will have you blissfully drifting through corners at high speed.

Unexpectedly, cars don't start out with boost, but fear not; boosting is a big part of racing in Most Wanted. Each vehicle has five events associated with it, and by taking first place in the easiest of these, you unlock the burn nitrous mod for that car. This enables you to boost after you build up your nitrous bar by doing things like drifting, taking down cops and rivals, and driving in oncoming traffic. Victory in each of a vehicle's events nets you speed points, which you need to earn a set number of before you can challenge each of the most wanted racers. Winning events also gives you access to other mods, including chassis that make you more resistant to impacts, gears that increase your acceleration or top speed, and tires that reinflate if popped by spike strips.

Winning events and making a good car better is rewarding; curiously unrewarding is the process of building up your car collection. In Most Wanted, you don't buy cars, and with the exception of the 10 cars driven by the 10 most wanted racers, you don't earn cars by winning events or doing anything else of significance to advance through the game. You simply find them all over Fairhaven. They're easily spotted thanks to the illuminated headlights and the manufacturer logos that hover in the air above them; you just pull up to a drivable vehicle, and it's instantly added to your collection. After that, you can warp to its spawn point and get behind the wheel, no matter where you are. The fact that you can and will so easily find yourself with a sizable stable of cars simply by cruising around Fairhaven, without having to do anything to earn some of the game's fastest rides, means that car collecting in Most Wanted lacks the sense of accomplishment so many racing games instill by letting you gradually gain access to better vehicles.

The upside of having cars waiting at set points (called jack spots) across Fairhaven is that if you get the cops on your tail as you're roaming about the city, you can pull up on a car's jack spot and, provided that you've got a bit of distance between you and your police pursuers, hop into the other car, reducing your heat level a bit. Your heat level determines just how much effort the police are putting into bringing you down. At the lowest level, you might have a few cop cruisers on your tail. As it increases, the police start setting up roadblocks in your path, and more and better law enforcement vehicles join the fray. Heavy SUVs might try to ram you head-on, and Corvette Interceptors speed along in front of you, deploying spike strips that, if hit, can seriously diminish your car's handling.

All is not lost, however; repair shops are all over the city, and driving through one instantly fixes up your car and gives you a fresh coat of paint to boot. Like using jack spots, speeding through these repair shops reduces your heat level. Your heat level increases automatically as a pursuit goes on, and taking down police cars with a satisfying shunt into oncoming traffic, a swift T-bone collision, or whatever aggressive, effective option presents itself, makes it go up significantly faster. If you get enough distance between you and your pursuers, you enter cooldown, during which your heat level declines. Stay in cooldown long enough, and the police call off the pursuit.

You earn speed points during police pursuits, but you get to keep them only if you eventually escape; if you get busted, you earn nothing, so the stakes can get quite high. Escape from the cops, and you feel great; see the speed points you earned over the course of several risky minutes disappear as you get busted, and you may be crestfallen. It's a good risk-vs.-reward system that leads to some extremely tense moments. Unfortunately, shaking off your pursuers can often feel as much a matter of luck as of skill. Police are tenacious in their pursuit of you--maybe a little too tenacious, because it sometimes seems as if no amount of changing direction, catching big air, going off-road, or anything else is enough to lose the cops. In the game's faster cars, speed can often be your savior, but in the more everyday models, it often feels like you don't have a fighting chance.

Carolyn Petit
By Carolyn Petit, Editor

Carolyn Petit has been reading GameSpot since 2000 and writing for it since 2008. She has a particular fondness for games of the 1980s, and intends to leave the field of games journalism as soon as she hears that her local Ghostbusters franchise is hiring.

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OtherFabbros 34 pts

Criterion ha ruined another Mastrpiece Need Episode.

PLEASE EA, DO NOT LET THE UNDERGROUND SERIES OF THESE NEWBIES.

PLEASE CRITERION COME BACK TO BURNOUT.

AyeeeMatt 10 pts

Criterion has always made great games up until this. Why is it so hard to understand what every fan wants? In depth customization, epic police chases, a good story and open world racing. C'mon guys...

Metallicwolf29 234 pts

 AyeeeMatt and also a great soundtrack! 

vunacar 30 pts

Good review, although a bit too generous, I must commend it for not being as terrible as other sites, giving the game undeserved nines and tens.

Justforvisit 67 pts

I was looking forward to it vey much, but that was because EA and DICE did a great job with the Hot Pursuit Relaunch. When I go though the comments and what I've read about it in mags so far it seems the change to Criterion wasn't a good Idea at all :(Might still get it when it's cheaper though

ShadowOfKratos 196 pts

 Justforvisit 

Hot pursuit is better in my opinion.

 

You see, a racing game has ONLY 3 basic fundamentals: Accelerate, Brake, and Turn.

If you mess that up, the game is essentially broken. That's what happened with this game.

JasonDarksavior 9 pts

 Justforvisit This is exactly how I feel. I expected something along the line of the 2010 game ... But I'm really disappointed. I really hyped this game up too.

toderascu23 21 pts

This game is terrible. Sharp controls? Really? The controls are kinda like Flatout 3. Before all the 20 updates.

ShadowOfKratos 196 pts

 toderascu23 

I agree... I played this 2day at my friend's place and she said the same thing. Don't get me wrong guys, I doubted her, but then I played it..... The game looks awesome and has great physics (in the sense that you see the car bob when you brake and stuff).

 

But the handling of the cars... My god, when you flick the left analog stick to turn, there's like a half second delay before the car actually STARTS turning, and another half a second for the car to STOP turning when you release the stick. It might not seem like a big issue until you start crashing all the time because of it. It's almost impossible to drive accurately on narrow paths, especially when driving slowly with sports cars or exotics.

 

Carolyn should go play Need for Speed Underground 2 and THEN come back and rate the handling of the cars in this game, because obviously her standars for good gameplay are very, very, raw... Like she started playing games only recently. (No offense intended)

 

I've been playing games ever since the 1st "Ninentendo Entertainment System" (NES), so I'm pretty sure no1 can say I'm the one who can't play this game.

Threesixtyci 33 pts

I don't care about the narrative, I'm disappointed that all the cars are all handed to you on a silver platter.  Rewards should be earned not given.

UntraceableHaze 10 pts

First off what in the fuck is that in the picture, the reviewer, GOOD FUCKING LORD!

 

Anyways, lol, I'\m surprised under 'The Bad' there wasn't Punishing difficulty, hahah, gamespot reviewres always put that, waaahhh the game's to hard, bad rating for that

MacInsomniac 5 pts

For all those Need For Speed haters out there (including me), Forza Horizon is the ultimate racing thing to play. I personally liked The Run, though, But this game looks seriously awful. Its not that EA is running out of options and concepts, they could always come up with Underground or The Run sequel, which I believe, most of the people here liked alot. They are more into money making out of their name by developing pathetic and shitty stuff like this, hope EA becomes the EA we used to see in in past.

Infinite_713 56 pts

 turkey39470 We are here for gamespot. Travel to that site and stay there.

turkey39470 6 pts

This is the worst site for reviews I've ever seen. I think it's time Gamespot reviewers look for a different line of work. You give a game a bad review for having sorry narration and when a game company says ok lets eliminate that problem you condemn them for no narration. Everyone always complains about a series being to much like the last game with not enough new features, but a company like Critetion is given the reins to freshen it up and still they are condemned for changing it up.

  This is the most fun racing game I've ever played and I have been gaming since 1985. Even when you are in a pursuit that is ending in being busted, you can't help but laugh. I love the fact that I don't have to wait till the end of the game before I get to use the best cars. Usually it's too late to really benefit from their speed by then. This game is at least a 9.5 and one of the first glitch free games I've seen on launch week.

Winchester01 10 pts

Criterion and bad FROSTBITE2 engine ruined NFS series, we want games like U2 and old MW, not this piece of ****

Rudorlf 28 pts

 Winchester01 No, this game does not use Frostbite 2, it utilizes Criterion's own Chameleon Engine.

faraany3k3k 15 pts

This is the first time I was reading a Carolyn review. And damn it had everything that I experienced with the game. Great review I must say.

 

Though the rating part is a little inaccurate imho. Although it lacks in narrative and innovation, but it is actually a superb polished racer which any arcade racing fan would definitely enjoy. So my rating is 8.5

PayneKiller 147 pts

Another NFS brand with identity issues. Tarnished. If they would just name them Burnout I'd be fine with it. But Hot Pursuit and Most Wanted were games I loved before Criterion turned them into Burnout games. Not saying they're necessarily bad but they're definitely not the NFS games we loved back then.

jetalpha2057 15 pts

Edge magazine gave it a 9.0 which should be enough for anyone who wants this game

winshot 88 pts

No storyline makes NFSMW a DLC of NFS: The Run Challenges.....  And the cops in this game no matter how u try to evade them in level 5 and 6, they will rape you...Damn!

leikeylosh 150 pts

Carolyn is right, they could've added a storyline of any kind to the game. The lack of narrative makes the climbing to the top totally unfulfilling.

stylee123 14 pts

WARNING DIFFICULTY SPIKE!!!  cops in mission chases (not free roam) will rubberband you forever!(even through hideouts). not good at all because you need to lose them to get cool upgrades. You may get lucky at some point and loose them in the alloted time. But after countless amount of tries, the game looses its luster. 

 

just trying to help fellow gamers because I almost threw the remote through the tv on the count of this.

kweeni 39 pts

Think I'm gonna check out the video review. Maybe that will change my mind about this game and convince me to buy it when it hits the bargain.

kweeni 39 pts

From what I saw on Youtube this looks like a Burnout sequel with a NFS skin.

This review doesn't exactly make it look any better..

Guess I won't be buying this game. Which is sad because I want to play with Porsche. Stupid EA and their Porsche license. :/

 

I hope they at least won't fuck up Underground 3 if they ever decide to make it.

Won't be getting my hopes up though...

 

They should also make another Porsche game. >.>

dylan417 168 pts

Gamespot, If you say the game is not so good, stop advertising the hell out of it. K? Not that I actually take anything from GS reviews, the site lost all credability after Skyward Sword and Uncharted 3.

Parky16 6 pts

 dylan417 lol. Those adverts not there for free. get it? :D

valdarez 129 pts

Disappointing to read about the lack of narrative, as that's what made the 'real' Most Wanted so great.

karan_sethi954 16 pts

 valdarez Yeah. I completely agree with you. The multiplayer component could have been a separate one.I too, 'most wanted' the Story mode.. 

Cillah187 199 pts

@karan_sethi954 OH MY GOD, THAT PUN! AAAA! THE GOGGLES DO NOTHING! Dx

kryten212 7 pts

 valdarez Am I the only one that hates stories in racing games? All I want to is win races and unlock cars, I dont give two fudges about a story.

Sepehr1395 11 pts

What ever it is,it's better than Hot pursuit and the run,at least it's open world,All hail free roam

sanechupp 9 pts

It's not Most Wanted, it's not like the first one. I like the takedown stuff and they should just make Burnout. I'll buy this later at a lower price mainly for the open world and Criterion made it. I like the crash mode and road rage Burnout has.

SIDEFX1 177 pts

Great review Carolyn.. Always i can trust your intelligent reviews,  positive or not, Your reviews give a great insight..

RyoEspada 5 pts

I've noticed that whenever Criterion has something to do with a Need For Speed game it would usually get pretty decent/good reviews or just generally a positive reception however when its just EA Blackbox developing the more recent titles e.g. The Run then the outcome is not so great. The score of 7.5 is pretty much on the spot for this game (would have given it a 8.0 but hey thats just my opinion right?) still I would say kudos to Criterion for developing another good Need For Speed title.

kingfang 5 pts

this is not a nfs mw game

this just a revamp of burnout series

the game has literally copied everything form burnout n put in cops and blacklist

.

what the original most wanted had was a gr8 story through which player wanted to beat the blacklist ..in the new most wanted it is just some achievement

very disappointing 

citrogen could hv made best nfs ever with all the variety of cars available,but they jus didnt do it

kdokey 33 pts

Good review and I can see her point on some of the things she doesn't like. However, after playing about 5-6 hours of the game those issues don't really have an impact on how I feel about the game. It has some of the most intense racing of any game in a long time and I've been loving every minute of it. 7.5 is a good score but my opinion is a 9.0. Let the bashing begin!  :)

garysingh34 73 pts

Funny, I was playing Burnout Paradise yesterday and the graphics are so silky and smooth. Playing that will fulfill my 'need for speed' instead of paying Ł40 for this recent iteration of a tired series.

Djdanieln39 24 pts

ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhh another F***king Score !! 

 

Guardian ? 100

GamingTrend ? 94

Vandal Online ? 93

Edge Magazine ? 90

Gamer.nl ? 90

games TM ? 90

IGN ? 90

Gameinformer ? 90

Game Over Online ? 87

GameTrailers ? 87

EGM ? 85

Destructoid ? 85

Polygon ? 85

Official Xbox Magazine ? 85

GamesBeat ? 85

Hardcre Gamer Magazine -80

Official Xbox Magazine UK ? 80

Joystiq ? 80

Giant Bomb -80

Eurogamer ? 80

 

Problem gamespot ?

 

UncleDolanDuck 7 pts

User score only 6.7?

Sigh another overrated game :(

risseer23 14 pts

 UncleDolanDuck can't go by a user score,could be hater's 

mtait01 377 pts

I love Criteron Racers so I will buy it either way - quite disappointed with the score but hey, everyone has their own opinion and I respect that - I know I will love this game because I have loved every Burnout game and also the last Hot Pursuit - can't play to get my hands on it :)

poorboy13 46 pts

I don't believe I've agreed with any of Carolyn's reviews...

SIDEFX1 177 pts

 poorboy13 Come on, a member since may this year..Carolyn does some of the best reviews as she evaluates games as games.. U won't need to say this again in the future.

kennythomas26 109 pts

 SIDEFX1  poorboy13 Yes I can agree with you on the review's that Carolyn does on this and I have agreed with some of her review's since last January's release of Dead Space 2. I also like how she come's of like a gamer like she is still buying them with the money out of her own pocket, and that has been kind of lacking from here for a while. 

sherrypizza 6 pts

I'm playing this game and its pretty intense and gameplay is good along with visuals. It deserve 8.5

fanaticsm 170 pts

nooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! <----- scream from Plants Vs. Zombies.......

DJKrayz_basic 84 pts

safe to say, for me, i wont be buying this one unless it comes down seriously in price.. the original Most Wanted was far better..

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User Reviews

  1. Needspeed most wanted review criterion edition.

  2. This isn't Need for Speed: Most Wanted, but a Burnout game using NFS Most Wanted title to sell. DO NOT BUY--RIP OFF

Need for Speed: Most Wanted - A Criterion Game

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