Crazy Taxi: Fare Wars
- New multiplayer function via Ad Hoc: Go head-to-head and compete for the highest fare. As a bonus, a turn-based multiplayer feature is also available that allows two players to challenge each other on a single PSP® system.
- Custom Music Player: Transfer your favorite songs to the PSP® system to create your own personalized soundtrack.
- Mega mini-games: There are 32 mini-games where you can perfect your skills, making it ideal for people on the go.
- Intuitive controls: Crazy Taxi maintains its classic arcade-style gameplay with easy pick-up-and-play controls.
- Save your best games: Show off your best fare runs to friends.
Product Description
Crazy Taxi™: Fare Wars on the PSP® (PlayStation®Portable) system brings multiplayer gameplay to this fan-favorite series for the first time. It’s an all-out bumper brawl as cabbies race, ram, smash and dash to steal fares and score big tips. Crazy Taxi™: Fare Wars combines Crazy Taxi™ and Crazy Taxi™ 2 with hilarious new features that allow players to meddle with their opponents in brand new ways. Ram your opponent’s cab to steal their passengers and use t… More >>

i used to play this all the time but ever since i got my new copy i’m not as intersted but if you played any other crazy taxi your gonna love this!
Rating: 5 / 5
This game is great, if you’ve have played the others and liked it you will love this.
On a sour note the music is different then the original
Rating: 5 / 5
I loved this game when I had it on the PS2 so I thought I would try it on the PSP and have not been disapointed. It has the Original CARZY TAXI and CRAZY TAXI 2, both I have found are quite fun. I love how you can play your own music in the game. It reads it right off of your music folder on your PSP. CRAZY TAXI 2 does swear quite a bit but you can turn down the voice volume and up the music volume. All togther I would say that this is a great buy!
Rating: 5 / 5
When Sega released their final video game console back in 1999, the Dreamcast, it really was groundbreaking and delivered so many wonderful video games. Although it was mainly overshadowed thanks to Sony’s Playstation 2, there are still die hard fans of the franchises that were built upon the Dreamcasts legacy. One of those was the arcade smash Crazy Taxi. Although the video game was well-received in the arcades as well as on the Dreamcast, many gamers have felt the need to want to see it do more for other systems. Now for the first time, it has made its way to the handheld market, but does it keep the meter clicking, or is it just a franchise that runs out of gas?
Crazy Taxi: Fare Wars for the PSP, is the offical handheld debut of the overlooked franchise that Sega developed so well years ago. The gameplay follows in suit just like the other ones did, you are a wild taxi driver who has to try to score as many points possible, inorder to earn a licensed grade. As you guide your passengers to their destinations, you can also earn extra fares and time buy avoiding traffic, jumping ramps and finding shortcuts to their destination. The graphics are really crisp, and handle quite well on the PSP, but it just seems more like it is second nature with the controls for die hard fans and gamers who’ve played the series before. The challenge modes also work nicely, by bringing some added gameplay into the mix, but the soundtrack feels the same like it did before from the earlier games.
All in all, Crazy Taxi: Fare Wars isn’t a bad game for those who haven’t experienced the thrills of the chase, but it just isn’t as much of a fan pleaser for those who’ve mastered the original versions before. I still often forget how wonderful the series was years ago, but I was hoping for something a little more to add to the challenge. I guess this one will leave no tip, until the next version can top this one.
Graphics: B
Sound: B-
Control: B 1/2-
Fun & Enjoyment: C+ for solo and multiplayer action
Overall: C+
Rating: 3 / 5
Do you know me from my review of the first Crazy Taxi game from the Dreamcast? You should, and when I heard of Fare Wars, I knew I want to get it. I got it, and when I first played it, it has all the fun that the Dreamcast versions of Crazy Taxi 1 and 2 combined. I began getting addicted to the action. But for you fans of CT3: High Roller, you won’t find the XBox exclusive for Fare Wars.
The graphics are the same as the DC versions of the two, the sound still remains the same, especially the voices. The folks at Sega dug into the archives and reused the same voices instead of hiring new voiceovers.
The techniques are still here, like the Crazy Drift, Crazy Dash, Crazy Hop, etc. The shifting and gas system is easy to learn. The R shoulder button is to accelerate, L is for the brake, X is Reverse, Circle is Forward. But you can change the configurations.
Now, for the first time, Sega has the guts to add the Customized Soundtrack. That’s when I get very excited about. I love this feature because you can play your own music on your memory stick if the music is in the MUSIC directory on your MS, not under the PSP/MUSIC directory. Too bad it doesn’t have the Offspring and Bad Religion tracks for you old-schoolers, but with your tracks you have on your CDs and mp3s, you can add them to the mix. How cool is that? For me, I put in the Billboard Top 100 from the 80’s as my customized soundtrack on my 4 Gig MS. I love this feature.
Overall, this game is VERY perfect on the road, or at a friend’s house, or even when you’re bored. I recommend it to you old-schoolers who sold their DC’s and miss the first 2 CT games. I missed mine until this game came. Get yours today.
Rating: 5 / 5