10

мар

After being introduced in Initial D's first season, the 'angels of Usui pass' were somewhat abandoned in the second season and the Third Stage movie. Extra Stage explains where Mako Satou and her co-driver Sayuki have been all along.

Initial D Arcade Stage (イニシャルD アーケード ステージ) (commonly referred to as IDAS, followed by a version number) is an arcade racing game series developed by Sega, based on the anime and manga series Initial D. In the United States, the series is simply known as Initial D, forgoing the ' Arcade Stage ' subtitle.

Apparently during the events of Initial D: Second Stage, the Impact Blue team, had to battle a scouting party of the Emperors Team, despite all warnings by fellow racers Shingo and Takeshi of the nearby Night Kids team. Later, as winter sets in, and the events of Initial D: Third Stage are taking place in Akina, the Impact Blue girls take a vacation, and Mako gives love another try, but is constantly drawn towards her life as a drift-racer as well as haunted by the memories of her recent love, Iketani. Extra stage 2 has been aired on Sky perfect TV (pay preview) In Japan. With the DVD set to come out on the 5th of Dec. Extra stage 2 follows the same story that was set in extra stage, but is now set in the days of 'Project D' (the fourth season) the choice of music was great really caught the moments however the end theme was lacking something. The opening intro animation was not the best, but the in show animation made up for it. The only part I found a real down side too is that, they over use the 4 way split screen animation.

Is great but to watch any of the Initial D: Extra stages (1 or 2) I recommend you have watched the show and have a strong interest in initial D, or these OVA's will not appeal to you as you wont know whats going on.

Initial D Arcade Stage
Developer(s)Sega
Publisher(s)Sega
Director(s)Isao Matsumoto
Producer(s)Kenji Arai
Composer(s)Hideaki Kobayashi
Platform(s)Arcade, PlayStation 2, PSP, PlayStation 3
Genre(s)Arcade racing
Mode(s)Single player, online multiplayer
CabinetSit down
Arcade systemSega NAOMI 2, Lindbergh, RingEdge, Nu2
CPUPentium Dual-Core

Initial D Arcade Stage (イニシャルD アーケード ステージ) (commonly referred to as IDAS, followed by a version number) is an arcaderacing game series developed by Sega, based on the anime and manga series Initial D. In the United States, the game series is simply known as Initial D.

Initial d extreme stage ps3 english patch

Premise[edit]

In Initial D Arcade Stage, players race against different opponents through various mountain passes featured in the manga. Vehicles that are prominently featured in the game are mostly licensed Japanese cars such as the Nissan Skyline GT-R, Mazda RX-7, Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution, Honda Civic, as well as the Toyota AE86. Using the optional magnetic card system, players can save a customized car and their progress for future sessions; otherwise, game progress is lost. Players can continue progress with their cards on another Initial D cabinet of the same version. However, the card must be renewed every 50 plays.

Note that resuming from another version is subject to following conditions:

  • There is no backwards compatibility (i.e. a version 2 card cannot be used on version 1 machine).
  • Upgrading the card to a more recent machine is permanent.
  • When upgrading from one version to another, remaining plays will be carried over and 50 plays will be credited to the card.

There are 12 games in the series so far: 9 for arcades and 3 for home consoles.

  • Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.1 (Arcade)
  • Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.2 (Arcade)
  • Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.3 (Arcade)
  • Initial D Arcade Stage 4 (Arcade)
  • Initial D Arcade Stage 5 (Arcade)
  • Initial D Arcade Stage 6 AA (Arcade)
  • Initial D Arcade Stage 7 AAX (Arcade)
  • Initial D Arcade Stage 8 Infinity (Arcade)
  • Initial D Arcade Stage Zero (Arcade)
  • Initial D Special Stage (PlayStation 2)
  • Initial D Street Stage (PSP)
  • Initial D Extreme Stage (PS3)

Game modes[edit]

Legend of the Streets
In the main story mode, players race with opponents from the manga. Opponents increase in difficulty with progression in the game. In the English versions of the game until Arcade Stage 4, their names are derived from the Tokyopop manga.
Time attack
Players race against time to rank against other players at the current machine or online. From Arcade Stage Ver.2/Special Stage to Arcade Stage 6 AA, players could change stages' weather conditions. This feature was removed from Arcade Stage 7 AAX to Arcade Stage 8 Infinity.
Bunta Challenge
First started in Arcade Stage Ver.2 to Arcade Stage Ver.3/Street Stage the player races against Bunta Fujiwara, the legendary street racer. Each time Bunta is defeated, the player will gain a level, and difficulty increases. In Arcade Stage Ver.3, the player loses 1000 points upon defeat. Regardless, the end credits still roll if you win or lose to Bunta. Bunta's car differs across levels. Level 1-6: AE86 Trueno, Level 7-11: AE86 Trueno w/TRD 20-Valve 4AGE Racing Engine, Level 12-15: GC8V Subaru Impreza WRX STi Version V. This mode was discontinued and removed in Arcade Stage 4/Extreme Stage though Bunta appeared as a final boss in Akina. It later returned in Arcade Stage 7 AAX (Only in Legend mode after clearing Rebirth mode).
Online Battle
Introduced in Arcade Stage 4/Extreme Stage, which allowed the players race against others located in Japan and some areas Asia.
Racer's Event
Introduced in Arcade Stage 5 to Arcade Stage 8 Infinity. 2 modes are only included such as online battle and time attack.
Tag Battle
Introduced in Arcade Stage 6 AA to Arcade Stage 8 Infinity. It allows players in the same location to team up. One player drives uphill and the other downhill to race with rivals. Matches are made based on past racing results, pitting drivers with similar levels against each other. When there is a difference in the level with your tag partner, stronger driver will match with strong, and weaker driver with the weak. Get the A(Ace) panel on the course. High score when you get the same color panel at the same section. Team with highest score wins.
Project Kanto's Fastest/Operation Kanto
Introduced in Arcade Stage 7 AAX, this mode is similar to tag battle mode, where players race against the rival characters based in the manga from Gunma to Kanagawa area. In races against Project.D's Ace, courses are random. In Arcade Stage 8 Infinity, new rivals include Tohru and Atsuro in Momiji Line, Sakamoto and Wataru in Sadamine Rain and The Lan Evo Teams in Tsuchisaka.

Games[edit]

Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.1[edit]

Japanese version: late 1999 / English version late 1996

Beginning with 4 courses such as Myogi (Night Kids' home course), Usui (Impact Blue's home course), Akina (Takumi's home course) and Happogahara (Todo School's first home course).

Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.2[edit]

Japanese version: late 2000 / English version Mid-late 2001

With 2 new courses such as Akagi, Takahashi brothers/Akagi Red Suns' home course and Irohazaka, Emperor's home course.

Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.3[edit]

Japanese version: late 2004 / English version early 2003 / Cycraft simulator version mid 2002 Train simulator 2016 full download pc.

New courses such as Akina Snow (only night), Shomaru, which was originally an exclusive for Special Stage and Tsuchisaka, The Lan Evo Team's home course. Also, new opponents in the game are Tohru Suetsugu, Atsuro Kawai, Miki, and the Tsucisaka Lan Evo team. New cars featured in the game are the Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution V, Lancer Evolution VI T.M. Edition, Mazda RX-8, and the Nissan Skyline 25GT-T. The game features original Eurobeat songs from artists including Matt Land, Powerful T., Ace Warrior, and Marco Polo.

Initial D Arcade Stage 4[edit]

Japanese Version: Late 2005/English Version Late 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019

Initial D Arcade Stage 4, also known in update version (Version 1.50) as Initial D Arcade Stage 4 Kai is the fourth release in the Initial D Arcade Stage series. Unlike the first three versions of the game, Initial D Arcade Stage 4 runs on the Sega Lindbergh hardware, uses a new card system, and features a new physics system. This arcade game also become the last game in Western before going to the next arcade game (Japanese language only). Only 2 new rivals such as God Hand and God Foot. Rivals from previous games such as Miki, the Tsucisaka Lan Evo team, Sakamoto, Nobuhiko Akiyama, and Tohru Suetsugu have been removed. New courses such as Lake Akina, Myogi (new layout with 4 sections) and Tsukuba Fruit Line. Some cars featured in previous games such as the Lancer Evolution VII and Toyota Celica have been removed.

Initial D Arcade Stage 5[edit]

Released in 2008, Initial D Arcade Stage 5 (return to Japanese version) is the fifth release in the Initial D Arcade Stage series. Released for the previous hardware for the second time (The screen is mostly like Sega's RingEdge). A few notable differences include heavy physics changes. Compared to Initial D Arcade Stage 4/Extreme Stage, which used 'drifting' physics, Initial D Arcade Stage 5 featured more realistic driving physics which included tire and brake wear down. Although the tire and brake wear are not displayed anywhere in game, experienced players can notice the difference in the change in physics as they progress in races.

New characters that appeared for the first time in the game are: Kobayakawa, Satoshi Omiya, Imposter Project D, Kai Kogashiwa (R.T. Katagiri S.V.), and Hideo Minagawa.New courses such as Happogahara, which used from Arcade Stage Ver.1 to Arcade Stage Ver.3/Street Stage (only daytime used is night) and only Extreme Stage appeared with full daytimes between day and night and Nagao, R.T. Katagiri S.V.'s homecourse.

Initial D Arcade Stage 6 AA[edit]

Initial D Arcade Stage 6 AA was released in June 2012.

A new mode, Tag Battle, was introduced. Unlike its predecessor, it was released for the Sega RingEdge hardware for the first time. The game saw a change in its driving physics. Unlike Initial D Arcade Stage 5, a drift gauge and an updated tachometer was introduced to help inform players when they were drifting. The 'Legend of the Street' mode also introduced a 'Rolling Start' for the first time since the story mode in Initial D Special Stage. The tachometer now informed players whether or not their speed was below the gear range. Online network was extended to support regions in which earlier versions of the game was known to be popular in, finally achieving both national wide and international matches. New cars and courses were added to the game through online updates without upgrade kits like IDAS4 1.5. The game also added a mileage system to show players their total driven mileage. Mileages could be used to redeem exclusive cars that were later available in updates. New characters that appeared for the first time in the game include: Ryuji Ikeda, Hiroya Okuyama, Go Hojo and Rin Hojo.[citation needed] New course such as Usui, which used from Arcade Stage Ver.1 to Arcade Stage Ver.3/Street Stage appeared with new layout, Tsubaki Line, Sadamine and Akina Snow, also appeared before in Arcade Stage Ver.3 which daytime is night change into day.

Note: AA = Double Ace

Initial D Arcade Stage 7 AAX[edit]

An arcade installed with two Initial D Arcade Stage 7 AAX games

Initial D Arcade Stage 7 AAX, was released for Sega RingEdge in January 2013. Like its predecessor, the legend of the streets mode from Original and Another mode are exactly the same as the previous one (Arcade Stage 6 AA) with Rebirth mode. The game is mostly a carry-over from Initial D Arcade Stage 6 AA, including updates. New characters include Shinji Inui to complete the Sidewinder battles of Project D, also Arcade Stage Ver.2/Special Stage/Arcade Stage Ver.3 characters such as Nobuhiko Akiyama (Rebirth), Sakamoto and Tohru Suetsugu (only in Legend) appeared in this game and rewind of Keisuke, from Project.D using Kyoko's FD. New cars include the Toyota Sprinter Trueno 2door and the new Toyota 86 GT (to replace the FT-86 prototype from the previous game). A new class of vehicles is introduced in this game called 'Complete Cars'. These include pre-tuned cars from several tuning shops in Japan, such as RE Amemiya. Online battles now include tag battles, allowing two in-store machines linking together and with internet access to battle against two other players in tag battles. New courses such as Tsuchisaka, which previously used in Arcade Stage Ver.3/Street Stage also appeared and Nanamagari, Team Spiral's home course. In this game, there are 3 songs which also used from Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.3/Street Stage and only a song from Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.2/Special Stage with new songs. The ending theme of this game is Gamble Rumble (7th Stage Version) by m.o.v.e., the opening theme remix of Initial D Third Stage, Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.2/Special Stage and Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.3.

Initial D Arcade Stage 8 Infinity[edit]

Initial D Arcade Stage 8 Infinity ∞ was released March 6, 2015. Like its predecessor, this game carries over all game modes from the previous version with a notable addition of Initial D Factory and D Coins. In Story Mode, the players can play the Team Side or Rival Side to see Driving Training Curriculum or what mission is for each story. The game added a new feature '1 Day 1 Time Continue' to allow players to have a free continue per day without inserting credits. New courses such as Momiji Line, for the first time in Special Stage, also appeared with new layout and Hakone, the place for battle between Ryosuke's FC and Rin Hojo's R32. Arcade Stage Ver.3/Street Stage characters such as Miki, Atsuro Kawai and The Lan Evo Teams also return. This is the last game with Japanese voice actors before Arcade Stage Zero, which does not feature voice anymore.

Initial D Arcade Stage Zero[edit]

Initial D Arcade Stage Zero was released for the Sega Nu2 arcade system board in October 9, 2018. Unlike its predecessors, this game now uses a 6-speed gear shifter (similar to the ones found in the Wangan Midnight Maximum Tune games) as opposed to the sequential ones. The character designs are taken from New Initial D the Movie with entirely new BGMs that are rock songs from the films such as Backdraft Smiths, Clutcho, The Hug Me, The Valves, and Gekkou Green. A small number of Eurobeat songs from previous games are also featured, but have to be unlocked. Also, the vehicles have been reduced by original ones featured in previous games, with the exception of the Toyota 86 which was featured in the films. However, more vehicles were added through free updates later in the year.

Initial D Special Stage[edit]

Initial D Special Stage (イニシャルD スペシャル ステージ) was released on June 26, 2003 for the PlayStation 2 and was re-released on February 26, 2004 under the 'PlayStation 2 the Best' label. Initial D Special Stage is based on Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.2 with additional Japanese voices for the first time and contains many features exclusive to this game. Initial D Special Stage is also the first home-console Initial D game published by Sega.

Initial D Special Stage contains a story mode that allows the player to reenact racing scenes from the Initial D manga series (up to Vol. 25 at the time of publication), as well as several new courses then not seen in the arcade versions of the game. In one of these courses, Shomaru went on to appear in Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.3/Street Stage. Real Myogi was later added back in Initial D Arcade Stage 4/Extreme Stage. Momiji Line would not return until Initial D Arcade Stage 8 Infinity. Bunta's Challenge is noticeably absent in the game. Additional features including replays for saved time-attack records and Iketani's car introduction.

Due to PlayStation 2's hardware limitations, the graphics of the game was downgraded from its arcade counterpart. The game is compatible with Logitech's Driving Force wheel series and other wheel controllers made for PlayStation 2. Sega also balanced all the cars in game due to the overpowering Integra DC2 from Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.2.

Initial D Street Stage[edit]

Initial D Street Stage (イニシャルD ストリート ステージ) is a PSP-exclusive game based on Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.3. This game features Dogfight by M.o.v.e. as it's intro theme which also used as the first opening theme of Initial D Fourth Stage. The legend of the street mode which pits players against the rival characters are exactly the same as the arcade game but Akina (Snow) is removed, meaning the battle with Miki is also removed, although his theme can be found in the game's BGM files.

I would suggest trying to install and run the game in compatibility mode with Windows XP.Locate the exe file that starts the installation in the CD, right click on it and select Properties. The sims castaway stories pc download. A new window will open where you need to go to Compatibility tab, and there select ' Run this program in compatibility mode for: Windows XP'.If you are not sure which file you should do this with, a screenshot of the contents of the CD would be helpful for us to be able to help you find itThanks!-Mai. Hi,Unfortunately, some old games may have some issues to run on Windows 10. I would suggest trying to install and run the game in compatibility mode with Windows XP.Locate the exe file that starts the installation in the CD, right click on it and select Properties.

Initial D Extreme Stage[edit]

Initial D Extreme Stage (イニシャルD エクストリーム ステージ) is a PlayStation 3 game based on Initial D Arcade Stage 4.

Reception[edit]

Initial D Arcade Stage (2001) sold 2,534 hardware units in Japan up until 2004.[1]Initial D Arcade Stage Ver. 3 sold 673 units between April 2004 and March 2005.[2] Combined, both versions of the game sold approximately 3,207 units up until March 2005. At a price of $2,130,[3] the game grossed approximately $7 million in hardware sales up until March 2005.

Initial D Arcade Stage 4 sold 3,904 units in 2007, including 3,056 units by March 2007,[4] and 848 during April–September 2007.[5] At a price of $4,250,[6] the game grossed approximately $17 million in hardware sales up until 2007.

In total, the Initial D Arcade Stage series has sold approximately 7,111 hardware units in Japan up until 2007, grossing approximately $24 million in hardware sales.

References[edit]

  1. ^'First Half Business Results (April–September 2004)'(PDF). Sega Sammy Holdings. 11 November 2004. p. 4. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
  2. ^'FY2004 Financial Results (for the year ended March 31, 2005)'(PDF). Tokyo: Sega Sammy Holdings. 25 May 2005. p. 11. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
  3. ^'Initial D' Arcade Stage Version 3 (SD)'. Coinopexpress. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
  4. ^'Fiscal Year Ended March 2007: Full Year Results'(PDF). Sega Sammy Holdings. 14 May 2007. p. 11. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
  5. ^'Fiscal Year 2008: Interim Results'(PDF). Sega Sammy Holdings. 12 November 2007. p. 11. Retrieved 19 May 2012.
  6. ^'Initial D' Arcade Stage Version 4 single'. Coinopexpress. Retrieved 6 January 2019.

External links[edit]

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Initial_D_Arcade_Stage&oldid=948820297'

After being introduced in Initial D\'s first season, the \'angels of Usui pass\' were somewhat abandoned in the second season and the Third Stage movie. Extra Stage explains where Mako Satou and her co-driver Sayuki have been all along.

Initial D Arcade Stage (イニシャルD アーケード ステージ) (commonly referred to as IDAS, followed by a version number) is an arcade racing game series developed by Sega, based on the anime and manga series Initial D. In the United States, the series is simply known as Initial D, forgoing the \' Arcade Stage \' subtitle.

Apparently during the events of Initial D: Second Stage, the Impact Blue team, had to battle a scouting party of the Emperors Team, despite all warnings by fellow racers Shingo and Takeshi of the nearby Night Kids team. Later, as winter sets in, and the events of Initial D: Third Stage are taking place in Akina, the Impact Blue girls take a vacation, and Mako gives love another try, but is constantly drawn towards her life as a drift-racer as well as haunted by the memories of her recent love, Iketani. Extra stage 2 has been aired on Sky perfect TV (pay preview) In Japan. With the DVD set to come out on the 5th of Dec. Extra stage 2 follows the same story that was set in extra stage, but is now set in the days of \'Project D\' (the fourth season) the choice of music was great really caught the moments however the end theme was lacking something. The opening intro animation was not the best, but the in show animation made up for it. The only part I found a real down side too is that, they over use the 4 way split screen animation.

Is great but to watch any of the Initial D: Extra stages (1 or 2) I recommend you have watched the show and have a strong interest in initial D, or these OVA\'s will not appeal to you as you wont know whats going on.

Initial D Arcade Stage
Developer(s)Sega
Publisher(s)Sega
Director(s)Isao Matsumoto
Producer(s)Kenji Arai
Composer(s)Hideaki Kobayashi
Platform(s)Arcade, PlayStation 2, PSP, PlayStation 3
Genre(s)Arcade racing
Mode(s)Single player, online multiplayer
CabinetSit down
Arcade systemSega NAOMI 2, Lindbergh, RingEdge, Nu2
CPUPentium Dual-Core

Initial D Arcade Stage (イニシャルD アーケード ステージ) (commonly referred to as IDAS, followed by a version number) is an arcaderacing game series developed by Sega, based on the anime and manga series Initial D. In the United States, the game series is simply known as Initial D.

\'Initial

Premise[edit]

In Initial D Arcade Stage, players race against different opponents through various mountain passes featured in the manga. Vehicles that are prominently featured in the game are mostly licensed Japanese cars such as the Nissan Skyline GT-R, Mazda RX-7, Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution, Honda Civic, as well as the Toyota AE86. Using the optional magnetic card system, players can save a customized car and their progress for future sessions; otherwise, game progress is lost. Players can continue progress with their cards on another Initial D cabinet of the same version. However, the card must be renewed every 50 plays.

Note that resuming from another version is subject to following conditions:

  • There is no backwards compatibility (i.e. a version 2 card cannot be used on version 1 machine).
  • Upgrading the card to a more recent machine is permanent.
  • When upgrading from one version to another, remaining plays will be carried over and 50 plays will be credited to the card.

There are 12 games in the series so far: 9 for arcades and 3 for home consoles.

  • Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.1 (Arcade)
  • Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.2 (Arcade)
  • Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.3 (Arcade)
  • Initial D Arcade Stage 4 (Arcade)
  • Initial D Arcade Stage 5 (Arcade)
  • Initial D Arcade Stage 6 AA (Arcade)
  • Initial D Arcade Stage 7 AAX (Arcade)
  • Initial D Arcade Stage 8 Infinity (Arcade)
  • Initial D Arcade Stage Zero (Arcade)
  • Initial D Special Stage (PlayStation 2)
  • Initial D Street Stage (PSP)
  • Initial D Extreme Stage (PS3)

Game modes[edit]

Legend of the Streets
In the main story mode, players race with opponents from the manga. Opponents increase in difficulty with progression in the game. In the English versions of the game until Arcade Stage 4, their names are derived from the Tokyopop manga.
Time attack
Players race against time to rank against other players at the current machine or online. From Arcade Stage Ver.2/Special Stage to Arcade Stage 6 AA, players could change stages\' weather conditions. This feature was removed from Arcade Stage 7 AAX to Arcade Stage 8 Infinity.
Bunta Challenge
First started in Arcade Stage Ver.2 to Arcade Stage Ver.3/Street Stage the player races against Bunta Fujiwara, the legendary street racer. Each time Bunta is defeated, the player will gain a level, and difficulty increases. In Arcade Stage Ver.3, the player loses 1000 points upon defeat. Regardless, the end credits still roll if you win or lose to Bunta. Bunta\'s car differs across levels. Level 1-6: AE86 Trueno, Level 7-11: AE86 Trueno w/TRD 20-Valve 4AGE Racing Engine, Level 12-15: GC8V Subaru Impreza WRX STi Version V. This mode was discontinued and removed in Arcade Stage 4/Extreme Stage though Bunta appeared as a final boss in Akina. It later returned in Arcade Stage 7 AAX (Only in Legend mode after clearing Rebirth mode).
Online Battle
Introduced in Arcade Stage 4/Extreme Stage, which allowed the players race against others located in Japan and some areas Asia.
Racer\'s Event
Introduced in Arcade Stage 5 to Arcade Stage 8 Infinity. 2 modes are only included such as online battle and time attack.
Tag Battle
Introduced in Arcade Stage 6 AA to Arcade Stage 8 Infinity. It allows players in the same location to team up. One player drives uphill and the other downhill to race with rivals. Matches are made based on past racing results, pitting drivers with similar levels against each other. When there is a difference in the level with your tag partner, stronger driver will match with strong, and weaker driver with the weak. Get the A(Ace) panel on the course. High score when you get the same color panel at the same section. Team with highest score wins.
Project Kanto\'s Fastest/Operation Kanto
Introduced in Arcade Stage 7 AAX, this mode is similar to tag battle mode, where players race against the rival characters based in the manga from Gunma to Kanagawa area. In races against Project.D\'s Ace, courses are random. In Arcade Stage 8 Infinity, new rivals include Tohru and Atsuro in Momiji Line, Sakamoto and Wataru in Sadamine Rain and The Lan Evo Teams in Tsuchisaka.

Games[edit]

Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.1[edit]

Japanese version: late 1999 / English version late 1996

Beginning with 4 courses such as Myogi (Night Kids\' home course), Usui (Impact Blue\'s home course), Akina (Takumi\'s home course) and Happogahara (Todo School\'s first home course).

Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.2[edit]

Japanese version: late 2000 / English version Mid-late 2001

With 2 new courses such as Akagi, Takahashi brothers/Akagi Red Suns\' home course and Irohazaka, Emperor\'s home course.

Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.3[edit]

Japanese version: late 2004 / English version early 2003 / Cycraft simulator version mid 2002 Train simulator 2016 full download pc.

New courses such as Akina Snow (only night), Shomaru, which was originally an exclusive for Special Stage and Tsuchisaka, The Lan Evo Team\'s home course. Also, new opponents in the game are Tohru Suetsugu, Atsuro Kawai, Miki, and the Tsucisaka Lan Evo team. New cars featured in the game are the Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution V, Lancer Evolution VI T.M. Edition, Mazda RX-8, and the Nissan Skyline 25GT-T. The game features original Eurobeat songs from artists including Matt Land, Powerful T., Ace Warrior, and Marco Polo.

Initial D Arcade Stage 4[edit]

Japanese Version: Late 2005/English Version Late 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019

Initial D Arcade Stage 4, also known in update version (Version 1.50) as Initial D Arcade Stage 4 Kai is the fourth release in the Initial D Arcade Stage series. Unlike the first three versions of the game, Initial D Arcade Stage 4 runs on the Sega Lindbergh hardware, uses a new card system, and features a new physics system. This arcade game also become the last game in Western before going to the next arcade game (Japanese language only). Only 2 new rivals such as God Hand and God Foot. Rivals from previous games such as Miki, the Tsucisaka Lan Evo team, Sakamoto, Nobuhiko Akiyama, and Tohru Suetsugu have been removed. New courses such as Lake Akina, Myogi (new layout with 4 sections) and Tsukuba Fruit Line. Some cars featured in previous games such as the Lancer Evolution VII and Toyota Celica have been removed.

Initial D Arcade Stage 5[edit]

Released in 2008, Initial D Arcade Stage 5 (return to Japanese version) is the fifth release in the Initial D Arcade Stage series. Released for the previous hardware for the second time (The screen is mostly like Sega\'s RingEdge). A few notable differences include heavy physics changes. Compared to Initial D Arcade Stage 4/Extreme Stage, which used \'drifting\' physics, Initial D Arcade Stage 5 featured more realistic driving physics which included tire and brake wear down. Although the tire and brake wear are not displayed anywhere in game, experienced players can notice the difference in the change in physics as they progress in races.

New characters that appeared for the first time in the game are: Kobayakawa, Satoshi Omiya, Imposter Project D, Kai Kogashiwa (R.T. Katagiri S.V.), and Hideo Minagawa.New courses such as Happogahara, which used from Arcade Stage Ver.1 to Arcade Stage Ver.3/Street Stage (only daytime used is night) and only Extreme Stage appeared with full daytimes between day and night and Nagao, R.T. Katagiri S.V.\'s homecourse.

Initial D Arcade Stage 6 AA[edit]

Initial D Arcade Stage 6 AA was released in June 2012.

A new mode, Tag Battle, was introduced. Unlike its predecessor, it was released for the Sega RingEdge hardware for the first time. The game saw a change in its driving physics. Unlike Initial D Arcade Stage 5, a drift gauge and an updated tachometer was introduced to help inform players when they were drifting. The \'Legend of the Street\' mode also introduced a \'Rolling Start\' for the first time since the story mode in Initial D Special Stage. The tachometer now informed players whether or not their speed was below the gear range. Online network was extended to support regions in which earlier versions of the game was known to be popular in, finally achieving both national wide and international matches. New cars and courses were added to the game through online updates without upgrade kits like IDAS4 1.5. The game also added a mileage system to show players their total driven mileage. Mileages could be used to redeem exclusive cars that were later available in updates. New characters that appeared for the first time in the game include: Ryuji Ikeda, Hiroya Okuyama, Go Hojo and Rin Hojo.[citation needed] New course such as Usui, which used from Arcade Stage Ver.1 to Arcade Stage Ver.3/Street Stage appeared with new layout, Tsubaki Line, Sadamine and Akina Snow, also appeared before in Arcade Stage Ver.3 which daytime is night change into day.

Note: AA = Double Ace

Initial D Arcade Stage 7 AAX[edit]

An arcade installed with two Initial D Arcade Stage 7 AAX games

Initial D Arcade Stage 7 AAX, was released for Sega RingEdge in January 2013. Like its predecessor, the legend of the streets mode from Original and Another mode are exactly the same as the previous one (Arcade Stage 6 AA) with Rebirth mode. The game is mostly a carry-over from Initial D Arcade Stage 6 AA, including updates. New characters include Shinji Inui to complete the Sidewinder battles of Project D, also Arcade Stage Ver.2/Special Stage/Arcade Stage Ver.3 characters such as Nobuhiko Akiyama (Rebirth), Sakamoto and Tohru Suetsugu (only in Legend) appeared in this game and rewind of Keisuke, from Project.D using Kyoko\'s FD. New cars include the Toyota Sprinter Trueno 2door and the new Toyota 86 GT (to replace the FT-86 prototype from the previous game). A new class of vehicles is introduced in this game called \'Complete Cars\'. These include pre-tuned cars from several tuning shops in Japan, such as RE Amemiya. Online battles now include tag battles, allowing two in-store machines linking together and with internet access to battle against two other players in tag battles. New courses such as Tsuchisaka, which previously used in Arcade Stage Ver.3/Street Stage also appeared and Nanamagari, Team Spiral\'s home course. In this game, there are 3 songs which also used from Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.3/Street Stage and only a song from Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.2/Special Stage with new songs. The ending theme of this game is Gamble Rumble (7th Stage Version) by m.o.v.e., the opening theme remix of Initial D Third Stage, Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.2/Special Stage and Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.3.

Initial D Arcade Stage 8 Infinity[edit]

Initial D Arcade Stage 8 Infinity ∞ was released March 6, 2015. Like its predecessor, this game carries over all game modes from the previous version with a notable addition of Initial D Factory and D Coins. In Story Mode, the players can play the Team Side or Rival Side to see Driving Training Curriculum or what mission is for each story. The game added a new feature \'1 Day 1 Time Continue\' to allow players to have a free continue per day without inserting credits. New courses such as Momiji Line, for the first time in Special Stage, also appeared with new layout and Hakone, the place for battle between Ryosuke\'s FC and Rin Hojo\'s R32. Arcade Stage Ver.3/Street Stage characters such as Miki, Atsuro Kawai and The Lan Evo Teams also return. This is the last game with Japanese voice actors before Arcade Stage Zero, which does not feature voice anymore.

Initial D Arcade Stage Zero[edit]

Initial D Arcade Stage Zero was released for the Sega Nu2 arcade system board in October 9, 2018. Unlike its predecessors, this game now uses a 6-speed gear shifter (similar to the ones found in the Wangan Midnight Maximum Tune games) as opposed to the sequential ones. The character designs are taken from New Initial D the Movie with entirely new BGMs that are rock songs from the films such as Backdraft Smiths, Clutcho, The Hug Me, The Valves, and Gekkou Green. A small number of Eurobeat songs from previous games are also featured, but have to be unlocked. Also, the vehicles have been reduced by original ones featured in previous games, with the exception of the Toyota 86 which was featured in the films. However, more vehicles were added through free updates later in the year.

Initial D Special Stage[edit]

Initial D Special Stage (イニシャルD スペシャル ステージ) was released on June 26, 2003 for the PlayStation 2 and was re-released on February 26, 2004 under the \'PlayStation 2 the Best\' label. Initial D Special Stage is based on Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.2 with additional Japanese voices for the first time and contains many features exclusive to this game. Initial D Special Stage is also the first home-console Initial D game published by Sega.

Initial D Special Stage contains a story mode that allows the player to reenact racing scenes from the Initial D manga series (up to Vol. 25 at the time of publication), as well as several new courses then not seen in the arcade versions of the game. In one of these courses, Shomaru went on to appear in Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.3/Street Stage. Real Myogi was later added back in Initial D Arcade Stage 4/Extreme Stage. Momiji Line would not return until Initial D Arcade Stage 8 Infinity. Bunta\'s Challenge is noticeably absent in the game. Additional features including replays for saved time-attack records and Iketani\'s car introduction.

Due to PlayStation 2\'s hardware limitations, the graphics of the game was downgraded from its arcade counterpart. The game is compatible with Logitech\'s Driving Force wheel series and other wheel controllers made for PlayStation 2. Sega also balanced all the cars in game due to the overpowering Integra DC2 from Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.2.

Initial D Street Stage[edit]

Initial D Street Stage (イニシャルD ストリート ステージ) is a PSP-exclusive game based on Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.3. This game features Dogfight by M.o.v.e. as it\'s intro theme which also used as the first opening theme of Initial D Fourth Stage. The legend of the street mode which pits players against the rival characters are exactly the same as the arcade game but Akina (Snow) is removed, meaning the battle with Miki is also removed, although his theme can be found in the game\'s BGM files.

I would suggest trying to install and run the game in compatibility mode with Windows XP.Locate the exe file that starts the installation in the CD, right click on it and select Properties. The sims castaway stories pc download. A new window will open where you need to go to Compatibility tab, and there select \' Run this program in compatibility mode for: Windows XP\'.If you are not sure which file you should do this with, a screenshot of the contents of the CD would be helpful for us to be able to help you find itThanks!-Mai. Hi,Unfortunately, some old games may have some issues to run on Windows 10. I would suggest trying to install and run the game in compatibility mode with Windows XP.Locate the exe file that starts the installation in the CD, right click on it and select Properties.

Initial D Extreme Stage[edit]

Initial D Extreme Stage (イニシャルD エクストリーム ステージ) is a PlayStation 3 game based on Initial D Arcade Stage 4.

Reception[edit]

Initial D Arcade Stage (2001) sold 2,534 hardware units in Japan up until 2004.[1]Initial D Arcade Stage Ver. 3 sold 673 units between April 2004 and March 2005.[2] Combined, both versions of the game sold approximately 3,207 units up until March 2005. At a price of $2,130,[3] the game grossed approximately $7 million in hardware sales up until March 2005.

Initial D Arcade Stage 4 sold 3,904 units in 2007, including 3,056 units by March 2007,[4] and 848 during April–September 2007.[5] At a price of $4,250,[6] the game grossed approximately $17 million in hardware sales up until 2007.

In total, the Initial D Arcade Stage series has sold approximately 7,111 hardware units in Japan up until 2007, grossing approximately $24 million in hardware sales.

References[edit]

  1. ^\'First Half Business Results (April–September 2004)\'(PDF). Sega Sammy Holdings. 11 November 2004. p. 4. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
  2. ^\'FY2004 Financial Results (for the year ended March 31, 2005)\'(PDF). Tokyo: Sega Sammy Holdings. 25 May 2005. p. 11. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
  3. ^\'Initial D\' Arcade Stage Version 3 (SD)\'. Coinopexpress. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
  4. ^\'Fiscal Year Ended March 2007: Full Year Results\'(PDF). Sega Sammy Holdings. 14 May 2007. p. 11. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
  5. ^\'Fiscal Year 2008: Interim Results\'(PDF). Sega Sammy Holdings. 12 November 2007. p. 11. Retrieved 19 May 2012.
  6. ^\'Initial D\' Arcade Stage Version 4 single\'. Coinopexpress. Retrieved 6 January 2019.

External links[edit]

Retrieved from \'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Initial_D_Arcade_Stage&oldid=948820297\'
...'>Initial D Extreme Stage(10.03.2020)
  • gridapp.netlify.appInitial D Extreme Stage ★ ★
  • After being introduced in Initial D\'s first season, the \'angels of Usui pass\' were somewhat abandoned in the second season and the Third Stage movie. Extra Stage explains where Mako Satou and her co-driver Sayuki have been all along.

    Initial D Arcade Stage (イニシャルD アーケード ステージ) (commonly referred to as IDAS, followed by a version number) is an arcade racing game series developed by Sega, based on the anime and manga series Initial D. In the United States, the series is simply known as Initial D, forgoing the \' Arcade Stage \' subtitle.

    Apparently during the events of Initial D: Second Stage, the Impact Blue team, had to battle a scouting party of the Emperors Team, despite all warnings by fellow racers Shingo and Takeshi of the nearby Night Kids team. Later, as winter sets in, and the events of Initial D: Third Stage are taking place in Akina, the Impact Blue girls take a vacation, and Mako gives love another try, but is constantly drawn towards her life as a drift-racer as well as haunted by the memories of her recent love, Iketani. Extra stage 2 has been aired on Sky perfect TV (pay preview) In Japan. With the DVD set to come out on the 5th of Dec. Extra stage 2 follows the same story that was set in extra stage, but is now set in the days of \'Project D\' (the fourth season) the choice of music was great really caught the moments however the end theme was lacking something. The opening intro animation was not the best, but the in show animation made up for it. The only part I found a real down side too is that, they over use the 4 way split screen animation.

    Is great but to watch any of the Initial D: Extra stages (1 or 2) I recommend you have watched the show and have a strong interest in initial D, or these OVA\'s will not appeal to you as you wont know whats going on.

    Initial D Arcade Stage
    Developer(s)Sega
    Publisher(s)Sega
    Director(s)Isao Matsumoto
    Producer(s)Kenji Arai
    Composer(s)Hideaki Kobayashi
    Platform(s)Arcade, PlayStation 2, PSP, PlayStation 3
    Genre(s)Arcade racing
    Mode(s)Single player, online multiplayer
    CabinetSit down
    Arcade systemSega NAOMI 2, Lindbergh, RingEdge, Nu2
    CPUPentium Dual-Core

    Initial D Arcade Stage (イニシャルD アーケード ステージ) (commonly referred to as IDAS, followed by a version number) is an arcaderacing game series developed by Sega, based on the anime and manga series Initial D. In the United States, the game series is simply known as Initial D.

    \'Initial

    Premise[edit]

    In Initial D Arcade Stage, players race against different opponents through various mountain passes featured in the manga. Vehicles that are prominently featured in the game are mostly licensed Japanese cars such as the Nissan Skyline GT-R, Mazda RX-7, Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution, Honda Civic, as well as the Toyota AE86. Using the optional magnetic card system, players can save a customized car and their progress for future sessions; otherwise, game progress is lost. Players can continue progress with their cards on another Initial D cabinet of the same version. However, the card must be renewed every 50 plays.

    Note that resuming from another version is subject to following conditions:

    • There is no backwards compatibility (i.e. a version 2 card cannot be used on version 1 machine).
    • Upgrading the card to a more recent machine is permanent.
    • When upgrading from one version to another, remaining plays will be carried over and 50 plays will be credited to the card.

    There are 12 games in the series so far: 9 for arcades and 3 for home consoles.

    • Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.1 (Arcade)
    • Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.2 (Arcade)
    • Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.3 (Arcade)
    • Initial D Arcade Stage 4 (Arcade)
    • Initial D Arcade Stage 5 (Arcade)
    • Initial D Arcade Stage 6 AA (Arcade)
    • Initial D Arcade Stage 7 AAX (Arcade)
    • Initial D Arcade Stage 8 Infinity (Arcade)
    • Initial D Arcade Stage Zero (Arcade)
    • Initial D Special Stage (PlayStation 2)
    • Initial D Street Stage (PSP)
    • Initial D Extreme Stage (PS3)

    Game modes[edit]

    Legend of the Streets
    In the main story mode, players race with opponents from the manga. Opponents increase in difficulty with progression in the game. In the English versions of the game until Arcade Stage 4, their names are derived from the Tokyopop manga.
    Time attack
    Players race against time to rank against other players at the current machine or online. From Arcade Stage Ver.2/Special Stage to Arcade Stage 6 AA, players could change stages\' weather conditions. This feature was removed from Arcade Stage 7 AAX to Arcade Stage 8 Infinity.
    Bunta Challenge
    First started in Arcade Stage Ver.2 to Arcade Stage Ver.3/Street Stage the player races against Bunta Fujiwara, the legendary street racer. Each time Bunta is defeated, the player will gain a level, and difficulty increases. In Arcade Stage Ver.3, the player loses 1000 points upon defeat. Regardless, the end credits still roll if you win or lose to Bunta. Bunta\'s car differs across levels. Level 1-6: AE86 Trueno, Level 7-11: AE86 Trueno w/TRD 20-Valve 4AGE Racing Engine, Level 12-15: GC8V Subaru Impreza WRX STi Version V. This mode was discontinued and removed in Arcade Stage 4/Extreme Stage though Bunta appeared as a final boss in Akina. It later returned in Arcade Stage 7 AAX (Only in Legend mode after clearing Rebirth mode).
    Online Battle
    Introduced in Arcade Stage 4/Extreme Stage, which allowed the players race against others located in Japan and some areas Asia.
    Racer\'s Event
    Introduced in Arcade Stage 5 to Arcade Stage 8 Infinity. 2 modes are only included such as online battle and time attack.
    Tag Battle
    Introduced in Arcade Stage 6 AA to Arcade Stage 8 Infinity. It allows players in the same location to team up. One player drives uphill and the other downhill to race with rivals. Matches are made based on past racing results, pitting drivers with similar levels against each other. When there is a difference in the level with your tag partner, stronger driver will match with strong, and weaker driver with the weak. Get the A(Ace) panel on the course. High score when you get the same color panel at the same section. Team with highest score wins.
    Project Kanto\'s Fastest/Operation Kanto
    Introduced in Arcade Stage 7 AAX, this mode is similar to tag battle mode, where players race against the rival characters based in the manga from Gunma to Kanagawa area. In races against Project.D\'s Ace, courses are random. In Arcade Stage 8 Infinity, new rivals include Tohru and Atsuro in Momiji Line, Sakamoto and Wataru in Sadamine Rain and The Lan Evo Teams in Tsuchisaka.

    Games[edit]

    Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.1[edit]

    Japanese version: late 1999 / English version late 1996

    Beginning with 4 courses such as Myogi (Night Kids\' home course), Usui (Impact Blue\'s home course), Akina (Takumi\'s home course) and Happogahara (Todo School\'s first home course).

    Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.2[edit]

    Japanese version: late 2000 / English version Mid-late 2001

    With 2 new courses such as Akagi, Takahashi brothers/Akagi Red Suns\' home course and Irohazaka, Emperor\'s home course.

    Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.3[edit]

    Japanese version: late 2004 / English version early 2003 / Cycraft simulator version mid 2002 Train simulator 2016 full download pc.

    New courses such as Akina Snow (only night), Shomaru, which was originally an exclusive for Special Stage and Tsuchisaka, The Lan Evo Team\'s home course. Also, new opponents in the game are Tohru Suetsugu, Atsuro Kawai, Miki, and the Tsucisaka Lan Evo team. New cars featured in the game are the Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution V, Lancer Evolution VI T.M. Edition, Mazda RX-8, and the Nissan Skyline 25GT-T. The game features original Eurobeat songs from artists including Matt Land, Powerful T., Ace Warrior, and Marco Polo.

    Initial D Arcade Stage 4[edit]

    Japanese Version: Late 2005/English Version Late 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019

    Initial D Arcade Stage 4, also known in update version (Version 1.50) as Initial D Arcade Stage 4 Kai is the fourth release in the Initial D Arcade Stage series. Unlike the first three versions of the game, Initial D Arcade Stage 4 runs on the Sega Lindbergh hardware, uses a new card system, and features a new physics system. This arcade game also become the last game in Western before going to the next arcade game (Japanese language only). Only 2 new rivals such as God Hand and God Foot. Rivals from previous games such as Miki, the Tsucisaka Lan Evo team, Sakamoto, Nobuhiko Akiyama, and Tohru Suetsugu have been removed. New courses such as Lake Akina, Myogi (new layout with 4 sections) and Tsukuba Fruit Line. Some cars featured in previous games such as the Lancer Evolution VII and Toyota Celica have been removed.

    Initial D Arcade Stage 5[edit]

    Released in 2008, Initial D Arcade Stage 5 (return to Japanese version) is the fifth release in the Initial D Arcade Stage series. Released for the previous hardware for the second time (The screen is mostly like Sega\'s RingEdge). A few notable differences include heavy physics changes. Compared to Initial D Arcade Stage 4/Extreme Stage, which used \'drifting\' physics, Initial D Arcade Stage 5 featured more realistic driving physics which included tire and brake wear down. Although the tire and brake wear are not displayed anywhere in game, experienced players can notice the difference in the change in physics as they progress in races.

    New characters that appeared for the first time in the game are: Kobayakawa, Satoshi Omiya, Imposter Project D, Kai Kogashiwa (R.T. Katagiri S.V.), and Hideo Minagawa.New courses such as Happogahara, which used from Arcade Stage Ver.1 to Arcade Stage Ver.3/Street Stage (only daytime used is night) and only Extreme Stage appeared with full daytimes between day and night and Nagao, R.T. Katagiri S.V.\'s homecourse.

    Initial D Arcade Stage 6 AA[edit]

    Initial D Arcade Stage 6 AA was released in June 2012.

    A new mode, Tag Battle, was introduced. Unlike its predecessor, it was released for the Sega RingEdge hardware for the first time. The game saw a change in its driving physics. Unlike Initial D Arcade Stage 5, a drift gauge and an updated tachometer was introduced to help inform players when they were drifting. The \'Legend of the Street\' mode also introduced a \'Rolling Start\' for the first time since the story mode in Initial D Special Stage. The tachometer now informed players whether or not their speed was below the gear range. Online network was extended to support regions in which earlier versions of the game was known to be popular in, finally achieving both national wide and international matches. New cars and courses were added to the game through online updates without upgrade kits like IDAS4 1.5. The game also added a mileage system to show players their total driven mileage. Mileages could be used to redeem exclusive cars that were later available in updates. New characters that appeared for the first time in the game include: Ryuji Ikeda, Hiroya Okuyama, Go Hojo and Rin Hojo.[citation needed] New course such as Usui, which used from Arcade Stage Ver.1 to Arcade Stage Ver.3/Street Stage appeared with new layout, Tsubaki Line, Sadamine and Akina Snow, also appeared before in Arcade Stage Ver.3 which daytime is night change into day.

    Note: AA = Double Ace

    Initial D Arcade Stage 7 AAX[edit]

    An arcade installed with two Initial D Arcade Stage 7 AAX games

    Initial D Arcade Stage 7 AAX, was released for Sega RingEdge in January 2013. Like its predecessor, the legend of the streets mode from Original and Another mode are exactly the same as the previous one (Arcade Stage 6 AA) with Rebirth mode. The game is mostly a carry-over from Initial D Arcade Stage 6 AA, including updates. New characters include Shinji Inui to complete the Sidewinder battles of Project D, also Arcade Stage Ver.2/Special Stage/Arcade Stage Ver.3 characters such as Nobuhiko Akiyama (Rebirth), Sakamoto and Tohru Suetsugu (only in Legend) appeared in this game and rewind of Keisuke, from Project.D using Kyoko\'s FD. New cars include the Toyota Sprinter Trueno 2door and the new Toyota 86 GT (to replace the FT-86 prototype from the previous game). A new class of vehicles is introduced in this game called \'Complete Cars\'. These include pre-tuned cars from several tuning shops in Japan, such as RE Amemiya. Online battles now include tag battles, allowing two in-store machines linking together and with internet access to battle against two other players in tag battles. New courses such as Tsuchisaka, which previously used in Arcade Stage Ver.3/Street Stage also appeared and Nanamagari, Team Spiral\'s home course. In this game, there are 3 songs which also used from Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.3/Street Stage and only a song from Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.2/Special Stage with new songs. The ending theme of this game is Gamble Rumble (7th Stage Version) by m.o.v.e., the opening theme remix of Initial D Third Stage, Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.2/Special Stage and Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.3.

    Initial D Arcade Stage 8 Infinity[edit]

    Initial D Arcade Stage 8 Infinity ∞ was released March 6, 2015. Like its predecessor, this game carries over all game modes from the previous version with a notable addition of Initial D Factory and D Coins. In Story Mode, the players can play the Team Side or Rival Side to see Driving Training Curriculum or what mission is for each story. The game added a new feature \'1 Day 1 Time Continue\' to allow players to have a free continue per day without inserting credits. New courses such as Momiji Line, for the first time in Special Stage, also appeared with new layout and Hakone, the place for battle between Ryosuke\'s FC and Rin Hojo\'s R32. Arcade Stage Ver.3/Street Stage characters such as Miki, Atsuro Kawai and The Lan Evo Teams also return. This is the last game with Japanese voice actors before Arcade Stage Zero, which does not feature voice anymore.

    Initial D Arcade Stage Zero[edit]

    Initial D Arcade Stage Zero was released for the Sega Nu2 arcade system board in October 9, 2018. Unlike its predecessors, this game now uses a 6-speed gear shifter (similar to the ones found in the Wangan Midnight Maximum Tune games) as opposed to the sequential ones. The character designs are taken from New Initial D the Movie with entirely new BGMs that are rock songs from the films such as Backdraft Smiths, Clutcho, The Hug Me, The Valves, and Gekkou Green. A small number of Eurobeat songs from previous games are also featured, but have to be unlocked. Also, the vehicles have been reduced by original ones featured in previous games, with the exception of the Toyota 86 which was featured in the films. However, more vehicles were added through free updates later in the year.

    Initial D Special Stage[edit]

    Initial D Special Stage (イニシャルD スペシャル ステージ) was released on June 26, 2003 for the PlayStation 2 and was re-released on February 26, 2004 under the \'PlayStation 2 the Best\' label. Initial D Special Stage is based on Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.2 with additional Japanese voices for the first time and contains many features exclusive to this game. Initial D Special Stage is also the first home-console Initial D game published by Sega.

    Initial D Special Stage contains a story mode that allows the player to reenact racing scenes from the Initial D manga series (up to Vol. 25 at the time of publication), as well as several new courses then not seen in the arcade versions of the game. In one of these courses, Shomaru went on to appear in Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.3/Street Stage. Real Myogi was later added back in Initial D Arcade Stage 4/Extreme Stage. Momiji Line would not return until Initial D Arcade Stage 8 Infinity. Bunta\'s Challenge is noticeably absent in the game. Additional features including replays for saved time-attack records and Iketani\'s car introduction.

    Due to PlayStation 2\'s hardware limitations, the graphics of the game was downgraded from its arcade counterpart. The game is compatible with Logitech\'s Driving Force wheel series and other wheel controllers made for PlayStation 2. Sega also balanced all the cars in game due to the overpowering Integra DC2 from Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.2.

    Initial D Street Stage[edit]

    Initial D Street Stage (イニシャルD ストリート ステージ) is a PSP-exclusive game based on Initial D Arcade Stage Ver.3. This game features Dogfight by M.o.v.e. as it\'s intro theme which also used as the first opening theme of Initial D Fourth Stage. The legend of the street mode which pits players against the rival characters are exactly the same as the arcade game but Akina (Snow) is removed, meaning the battle with Miki is also removed, although his theme can be found in the game\'s BGM files.

    I would suggest trying to install and run the game in compatibility mode with Windows XP.Locate the exe file that starts the installation in the CD, right click on it and select Properties. The sims castaway stories pc download. A new window will open where you need to go to Compatibility tab, and there select \' Run this program in compatibility mode for: Windows XP\'.If you are not sure which file you should do this with, a screenshot of the contents of the CD would be helpful for us to be able to help you find itThanks!-Mai. Hi,Unfortunately, some old games may have some issues to run on Windows 10. I would suggest trying to install and run the game in compatibility mode with Windows XP.Locate the exe file that starts the installation in the CD, right click on it and select Properties.

    Initial D Extreme Stage[edit]

    Initial D Extreme Stage (イニシャルD エクストリーム ステージ) is a PlayStation 3 game based on Initial D Arcade Stage 4.

    Reception[edit]

    Initial D Arcade Stage (2001) sold 2,534 hardware units in Japan up until 2004.[1]Initial D Arcade Stage Ver. 3 sold 673 units between April 2004 and March 2005.[2] Combined, both versions of the game sold approximately 3,207 units up until March 2005. At a price of $2,130,[3] the game grossed approximately $7 million in hardware sales up until March 2005.

    Initial D Arcade Stage 4 sold 3,904 units in 2007, including 3,056 units by March 2007,[4] and 848 during April–September 2007.[5] At a price of $4,250,[6] the game grossed approximately $17 million in hardware sales up until 2007.

    In total, the Initial D Arcade Stage series has sold approximately 7,111 hardware units in Japan up until 2007, grossing approximately $24 million in hardware sales.

    References[edit]

    1. ^\'First Half Business Results (April–September 2004)\'(PDF). Sega Sammy Holdings. 11 November 2004. p. 4. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
    2. ^\'FY2004 Financial Results (for the year ended March 31, 2005)\'(PDF). Tokyo: Sega Sammy Holdings. 25 May 2005. p. 11. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
    3. ^\'Initial D\' Arcade Stage Version 3 (SD)\'. Coinopexpress. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
    4. ^\'Fiscal Year Ended March 2007: Full Year Results\'(PDF). Sega Sammy Holdings. 14 May 2007. p. 11. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
    5. ^\'Fiscal Year 2008: Interim Results\'(PDF). Sega Sammy Holdings. 12 November 2007. p. 11. Retrieved 19 May 2012.
    6. ^\'Initial D\' Arcade Stage Version 4 single\'. Coinopexpress. Retrieved 6 January 2019.

    External links[edit]

    Retrieved from \'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Initial_D_Arcade_Stage&oldid=948820297\'
    ...'>Initial D Extreme Stage(10.03.2020)