![]() ![]() In terms of gameplay, Crazy Taxi 2 doesn’t attempt to add a lot more into the mix, but the incorporation of group fares is a nice touch, letting you pick up a few cheerleaders, mimes or other novelty characters. The New York-inspired setting lends itself well to Crazy Taxi’s unique style of driving as San Francisco did in the original, with plenty of alternative routes to use and licensed retail chains such as KFC to drop your customers off at. Over the years Sega has left us with puzzling series like Super Monkey Ball and Crazy Taxi – thanks to hit-and-miss thinking or whatever it was being slipped into Sega employees’ coffee – but if given the chance would we ask for it any other way? Let’s think for a moment… no! The formula used to make Crazy Taxi worked a charm, and as you undoubtedly know, the second game in the series adds to it, branding it a classic that gets used every time the Dreamcast comes out of the cupboard. ![]()
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