Test Drive Unlimited 2 (abbreviated as TDU2) is an open world racing video game developed by Eden Games and published by Atari. It is the tenth installment of the series, and the second to be marketed under the Unlimited franchise. It is also the second game in the series to be based on an open world styled gameplay. It was the final game released by Eden Games before being shut down by Atari, SA in 2013
Test Drive Unlimited 2 includes a good variety of roads and a relatively small variety of sports cars and bikes based on models from a handful of manufacturers; It also includes four wheel drive SUVs, a new feature for the series which is looked upon by the community as being subpar. The plot revolves around an unknown racer, your avatar (selected by you, the player, at the outset from among a half dozen available character models, three of them female, the other three male) who is offered the chance to enter a series of tournaments and, progressing through the game, to eventually become the winner of a fictional "Solar Crown Cup," by defeating a number of NPCs (non-player characters) in various racing events.
Read more about Test Drive Unlimited 2: Gameplay, Development and Marketing, Reception
Famous quotes containing the words test, drive and/or unlimited:
“In my utter impotence to test the authenticity of the report of my senses, to know whether the impressions they make on me correspond with outlying objects, what difference does it make, whether Orion is up there in heaven, or some god paints the image in the firmament of the soul?”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)
“You may drive a dog off the Kings armchair, and it will climb into the preachers pulpit; he views the world unmoved, unembarrassed, unabashed.”
—Jean De La Bruyère (16451696)
“It cannot be denied that for a society which has to create scarcity to save its members from starvation, to whom abundance spells disaster, and to whom unlimited energy means unlimited power for war and destruction, there is an ominous cloud in the distance though at present it be no bigger than a mans hand.”
—Arthur Stanley Eddington (18821944)