18 Wheeler: American Pro Trucker (GameCube) Playthrough - NintendoComplete

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 11. 09. 2017
  • A playthrough of Acclaim Cheltenham's 2002 arcade truck-driving racing game for the Nintendo GameCube, 18 Wheeler: American Pro Trucker.
    Played through the arcade mode on the normal difficulty level as Asphalt Cowboy.
    18 Wheeler: American Pro Trucker on the GameCube is a thoroughly solid port of an excellent Sega arcade racer. Developed originally by Sega AM2 and ported to the Dreamcast, PlayStation 2, and the Gamecube (the latter two ported by Acclaim), you play as a trucker in charge of a massive 18-wheeler responsible for hauling cargo from New York to San Francisco over the course of four stages.
    There are quite a few things that it throws at you in typical Sega fashion to spice up the action: you can slipstream behind other large vehicles (which effectively provides the equivalent of a turbo boost), take alternate (and far more difficult) routes in search of shortcuts, wipe out specially marked cars to increase your remaining time, and in between stages, you get bonus rounds that can earn you important power-ups for your truck.
    These power-ups are essential, as you aren't just racing against the timer. You are given a rival in the form of the ever-looming Lizard Tail. This guy just doesn't give up, and he thinks nothing of running you off the road so that he can deliver his shipment first. He growls at you constantly over the radio and provides a great deal of entertainment, though I wish he would get sucked up in the tornado that touches down in the second race.
    The ads are pretty funny in this - I always get a kick out of seeing random things like the Denny's restaurant, signs for Holiday Inn, and the Texaco stations on the roadside. Sega loved those in-game advertisements for awhile - remember Crazy Taxi?
    I remember this game not reviewing well when it was released, but I enjoyed it. I had it on the Dreamcast and always thought it was great. Being an arcade game, it doesn't feature a ton of content, but everything that is here is great: I never really thought it needed more. It adheres to an older game design ethos than many of its contemporaries - you play it again and again, improving your times and high scores, and that's the point. It's fun for the sake of being fun, not because it forces you through a half-baked story mode that lasts six hours. If you've played other Dreamcast-era Sega arcade ports, you know the drill, and you probably already know if this will appeal to you or not.
    I personally give it two thumbs up. If you require an RPG-like experience in any game you play, you'll be left wanting, but I can pretty much guarantee that any fan of Sega's old arcade games will really enjoy it , especially given the dirt-cheap prices you can find it for.
    _
    No cheats were used during the recording of this video.
    NintendoComplete (www.nintendocomplete.com/) punches you in the face with in-depth reviews, screenshot archives, and music from classic 8-bit NES games!
    Visit for the latest updates!
    / 540091756006560
    / nes_complete

Komentáře • 150

  • @sonicboy678
    @sonicboy678 Před 4 lety +46

    THERE'S A TRAFFIC JAM, AND IT'S

  • @Gameboy-Unboxings
    @Gameboy-Unboxings Před 3 lety +74

    This game is my childhood...Every sound I remember so clearly and vividly

  • @1gamewin
    @1gamewin Před 4 lety +18

    the real OG american truck simulator

  • @Airwolf2030
    @Airwolf2030 Před 4 lety +72

    this game brings back memories, I play this game on a arcade when I was a kid

  • @djschu116
    @djschu116 Před 5 lety +20

    THERE’S A TRAFFIC JAM AND ITS ALL YOUR FAULT

  • @a2pha
    @a2pha Před 3 lety +6

    The only problem I have with this game is, no matter how well you drive your truck your opponent NEVER falls behind completely. It's a cheat and ruins the experience IMHO.

  • @NintendoComplete
    @NintendoComplete  Před 6 lety +57

    18 Wheeler was yet another Sega arcade title that took a completely unexpected and boring sounding concept and turned it into something that was always a blast to play. With how cheap it is, there's no excuse for Sega coin-op fans to not try this one out!

  • @Zolega89
    @Zolega89 Před 3 lety +5

    DID HE JUST CALL YOU A GREENHORN?!

  • @highwayspeed867

    I remember playing this on ps2 it’s so nostalgic watching it now that I have PS5. And crazy that now I’m Truck Driver myself.

  • @travieso06
    @travieso06 Před 4 lety +18

    i remember playing this game back in the day. and my dream was that one day to have an actual trucker game. where traveling from a city to a city would've take hours. now we have american truck simulator and that dream came true.

  • @baby333
    @baby333 Před 5 lety +53

    3:06

  • @thecowboy2
    @thecowboy2 Před 6 lety +54

    You're Winner!!

  • @Motherslapper
    @Motherslapper Před 2 lety +8

    YOURE IN MY WAY, GREENHORN.

  • @hanchiman
    @hanchiman Před 6 lety +41

    This game appeared in alot of bars in their tiny arcade section between pool tables and pinball machines

  • @joshmontemayor1212
    @joshmontemayor1212 Před 2 lety +4

    This was the game that got me into trucks.

  • @DayVMusic_
    @DayVMusic_ Před rokem +4

    I remember my dad surprised me with this game when I was kid for the GameCube since he was a trucker at the time and still is🙌🏼

  • @StarTrek4Life

    I remember playing this game on a big machine at my then local movie theatre. Bench, Steering Wheel, Shifter and all.

  • @airshom
    @airshom Před 3 lety +1

    I remember playing this in New York New York arcade, Las Vegas. Goodtimes!! thanks for the memories!

  • @spoolyz0296
    @spoolyz0296 Před dnem

    I would spend all of my $20 for the arcade just one this one game. This game and the Hard Truck series are what inspired me to become a truck driver.

  • @Peter_Morris
    @Peter_Morris Před 6 lety +7

    If I ever get an actual arcade game, I want the deluxe version of 18-Wheeler American Pro Trucker. Honking that horn was so much fun in the arcades back in the day, it was worth the dollar every time.