In fairness racing a Hachi-Roku against an Lan EVO in Grid/Forza 2 is indeed better. Initial D Extreme Stage was released in Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan and South Korea on July 3, 2008. It is based on the Japanese manga Initial D created by Shuichi Shigeno in 1995. However, any Western member of the population who isn't initiated and has been playing Grid may find themselves somewhat disappointed. Initial D Extreme Stage (D, Inishyaru D ekusutorimu suteji) is a racing game developed by Sega for the PlayStation 3. I personally like Initial D ES, because I have a) a translator real handy B) I know the story of Initial D real well c) I played the PSP version to death. IMHO, Initial D extreme stage is a missed opportunity on the PS3, it's not like the hardware is pushed terribly hard, and there is more they could have done to bring the Initial D experience to the home than this okay-ish port of the arcade. But it is typical repetitive Japanese game. Once the cars are tuned a wee bit and you've recognised that 'X' is the new 'O' and vice-verse, it becomes OK. STILL HAVE YOUR PS3 AND LIKE INTITIAL D INITIAL D EXTREME STAGE IS THE WAY. It also does not appear likely that this game has a huge following. At this point, it does not appear likely that the PS3 version will be released in North America. To be honest, you have to see past the 'Initial D'rive. Initial D Extreme Stage is, essentially, the home version of Initial D Arcade Stage 4 (simply Initial D 4 in the USA), version 1.5. I would make a purchase if I wasn't so utterly skint. Copy your BACKUP folder just in case you failed to make a whole backup of your game and you can delete 2d.xdelta, car.xdelta, EBOOT.xdelta, patch.
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