Ride 3 review - a generous, if flawed, racer
In those intervening years - and after a quickfire sequel released in 2016 - Milestone has put a lot of work in, and Ride 3 is evidence of that. This is a generously featured racing game, boasting some 230 bikes and 30 tracks. And what bikes they are - from cafe racers to vintage rides, and from waspish 2-stroke 250cc with a sting in their tail to the more bullish modern racers - and what tracks, from the North West 200 to the Nordschleife via Oulton Park and Sugo. There's a lot of game here, and it's often stirring stuff.
There's an elegance asked of bikes that you don't really get on four wheels, with braking distances lengthened and racing lines a touch more malleable - and yet all the while there's a violence that's a key part of a bike's appeal. Milestone opts to tame that with an approachable model to its bikes, although they're still able to buck under acceleration and squirrel under braking. It's all engaging enough - and easy to get caught in a trance when chasing your own best times - though I'd have loved the option to truly unleash the fury of these machines, as too often they can feel like they're wrapped in cotton wool.
It does its very best to match the feature set of a marquee racer, though, with a fully featured and powerful livery editor making the cut, a deep selection of upgrades and accessories for each bike, plus a slim photo mode. There's no escaping, though, that the polish you'd expect of a top-tier racing game - a genre that's more often than not been about flashy visuals - just isn't there. The bikes themselves look splendid, modelled with detail and, you sense, a fair amount of lusty enthusiasm, but the locales look limp, deadened by poor lighting and lack of detail.
And yet, for all that, I've greatly enjoyed Ride 3, its rough edges overcome by the passion that Milestone so evidently has for its subject matter, and if you've any passion for the art of motorbikes it's a joy to share that with the developer. And where else exactly are you going to be able to take Mike Hailwood's four-cylinder 500cc Honda around Brands Hatch's Grand Prix loop? Milestone's been threatening to make the great motorbike game for some time now, and while Ride 3 isn't quite it, it's as close as it's ever been.

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