Baja, the latest off-road racer to come out of THQ, puts players on some of the most treacherous terrain imaginable and lets them loose. With 40 fully upgradeable vehicles spread across eight classes that include 4x4s, buggies, and Trophy Trucks there should be no shortage of options for modes of transportation through the world's most rigorous endurance race: the Baja. The game also touts "revolutionary vehicle physics" and realistic damaging and repairs. Just recently IGN sat down to speak with Robb Rinard from 2XL Games to discuss why avid racing fans should hop in the driver's seat with Baja.
Baja Edge of Control coming digitally to Xbox One, PS4.
It’s no secret that the Xbox 360’s lifespan is coming to an end, meaning we’ve got an extensive library of games to sort through and possibly trade-in to GameStop or EBGames. Because of this, used Xbox 360 games are incredibly cheap, and a lot of people might be spending this summer adding those last few games to their collections.
Time to round up the best racing titles in a Top 10 run down.
There are games with niche followings, and then there are games that absolutely nobody played. Baja: Edge of Control is one of those games.
Lost in the skyrocketing popularity of Call of Duty and Halo, Baja: Edge of Control quietly landed on store shelves in late 2008, a month before the two major shooting franchises released their yearly variations. And it sat there. After six months, those copies were moved to the bargain bin, and eventually, GameStop. Today, over five years after release, online leaderboards struggle to show more than ten or eleven people with registered lap times at most tracks. Online itself was a ghost town since launch day. People simply didn’t buy this game.
And that’s a shame, because Baja: Edge of Control is a title that any motorsports fan shouldn’t hesitate to add to their collection.