Grand Prix Legends is a computer racing simulator developed by Papyrus Design Group and published in 1998 by Sierra On-Line under the Sierra Sports banner. It simulates the 1967 Grand Prix season.[2]
Grand Prix Legends | |
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![]() North American boxart | |
Developer(s) | Papyrus Design Group |
Publisher(s) | Sierra Sports |
Director(s) | Matt Sentell |
Designer(s) | Randy Cassidy David Kaemmer Brian C. Mahony Matt Sentell Richard Yasi |
Platform(s) | Microsoft Windows |
Release | |
Genre(s) | Racing simulation |
Mode(s) | Single-player, multiplayer |
The game offers several modes in which the player can race alone or against AI opponents. The game also features multiplayer via LAN. Many parameters affecting the skill and aggressiveness of the AI drivers can be specified.
The game was in development for three years.[3]Inspired by the 1966 film Grand Prix, the developers chose to base the game on the 1967 Formula 1 Grand Prix season because during that period tracks were narrow and lined with trees, houses, and other elements that in a video game can serve as backgrounds to enhance the sensation of speed.[2] In addition, the more primitive suspension of cars of the time meant that the car physics could be more visually dramatic.[2]
However, the amount of time that has passed since the 1967 Grand Prix season meant that some of the tracks the designers wanted to recreate no longer existed in their original form. The team visited town halls to get blueprints for defunct tracks.[2] Licensing could also be difficult. Papyrus co-founder Dave Kaemmer commented, "It's not a pleasant thing to call someone on the phone and say that you want to license their dead son's name, but people have been very helpful."[2]
Aggregator | Score |
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GameRankings | 84%[4] |
Publication | Score |
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CNET Gamecenter | 9/10[5] |
CGSP | [6] |
CGW | [7] |
Edge | 9/10[8] |
GamePro | [9] |
GameRevolution | A[10] |
GameSpot | 8.9/10[11] |
Jeuxvideo.com | 17/20[12] |
Next Generation | [13] |
PC Accelerator | 7/10[14] |
PC Gamer (US) | 70%[15] |
PC Zone | 90%[16] |
The game received "favorable" reviews according to the review aggregation website GameRankings.[4] GameSpot said, "Grand Prix Legends will reward you with arguably the most intense racing experience ever seen on a personal computer."[11] Next Generation said of the game in its January 1999 issue, "Overall, there aren't enough adjectives to describe how excellent this is. If you're willing to make the investment it takes to become good, you'll be rewarded with what is perhaps the most exciting and engaging racing game we've ever had the privilege to play."[13] An issue later, the magazine ranked it at #47 in its list of the Fifty Best Games of All Time, saying, "Not only does it have the most realistic physics model yet in a racing game [...] a brilliant premise, and the best drive AI we've seen, but GPL enables players to do something they simply never could in the real world. Many, if not most[,] games do that, but few do it as convincingly or compellingly."[17]
The game was a commercial failure;[18][19] Andy Mahood of PC Gamer US described its sales as "abysmally poor".[18] In 2003, writer Mark H. Walker reported that "the game sold only a few thousand copies" in the United States, which he attributed to the general unpopularity of Formula One racing in the country. He noted that its "steep learning curve kept many fans away" in European markets.[19] GameSpot's Gord Goble attributed its performance to the "combination of treacherous gameplay, sometimes glacial frame rates, and esoteric subject matter". It ultimately totaled 200,000 sales by 2004.[20]
The game was the runner-up for Computer Gaming World's 1998 "Best Driving" award, and for GameSpot's 1998 "Driving Game of the Year" award, both of which ultimately went to Need for Speed III: Hot Pursuit.[21][22] The staff of the former said of the game, "Arguably the most ambitious and realistic driving simulation to date—modeling the thrills and difficulties of Grand Prix racing circa 1967—it is also perhaps the toughest to play. It's an awesome game for those who can handle it."[21]
The game won Computer Games Strategy Plus' 1998 "Sports Game of the Year" award. The staff wrote, "Racing games are always popular, and there are a lot of them, but few if any approach Grand Prix Racing's level of sophistication and uncompromising detail."[23] It also won the Best Racing Game award at the 1998 CNET Gamecenter Awards.[24]