Hey mac gamers, I have some very exiting news, that is, Pall the Tall has recently ported Need For Speed: World to the macintosh! You can download it please give me feedback about this mac port. Additional Port Information: Graphical Cards Tested: NVIDIA 9400M graphics card, NVIDIA GeForce 320M. Welcome to the “Need for Speed World” for Mac game page. This page contains information + tools how to port this game so you can play it on your Mac just like a normal application. Since almost 6 month EA games, discontinued the service of the game. So the game won’t work anymore. 8/10 (314 votes) - Download Need for Speed World Free. Need for Speed World is a racing game in which you have to fight to be the best. Download Need for Speed World and compete in incredible online races. Need for Speed World is the first title of the Need for Speed saga that can only be played. Today we are glad to present you the Need for Speed Rivals Mac OS X ACTiVATED, available for Mac OS X devices. Updated September 2018: Need for Speed Rivals OS X has been included in the Top 5 action games for Mac, because of the large number of downloads. Need for Speed Rivals Mac.
Need for Speed: World | |
---|---|
Cover art featuring a Lamborghini Gallardo and a Nissan 370Z being chased by police | |
Developer(s) | Quicklime Games EA Singapore |
Publisher(s) | Electronic Arts |
Composer(s) | |
Series | Need for Speed |
Platform(s) | Microsoft Windows |
Release | July 27, 2010 (July 20, 2010 for users who pre-ordered the Starter Pack)[1] |
Genre(s) | Massively multiplayer online racing game |
Mode(s) | Multiplayer |
Need for Speed: World (previously known as Need for Speed: World Online) was the fifteenth installment in the racing video gameNeed for Speed franchise published by Electronic Arts. It was co-developed by EA Black Box (rebranded Quicklime Games before closing in 2015) and EA Singapore. It was the first freemiummassively multiplayer online racing game in the Need for Speed series and was available on Microsoft Windows. World was released worldwide on July 27, 2010. However, people who ordered a 'Starter Pack' had an early 'head-start' in the game, which started on July 20, 2010.[1][2]
Need for Speed: World, along with other EA free-to-play titles Battlefield Heroes, Battlefield Play4Free, and FIFA World, went offline on July 14, 2015.
World took on the gameplay style of 2005's Most Wanted and 2006's Carbon, focusing on illegal street racing, tuning and police chases, and added some elements to the game such as 'power ups' (somewhat similar to Mario Kart). World was set in a fictional city which combined the cities of Rockport from Most Wanted and Palmont from Carbon into its map design, with redesigned graphics and new locations added to the map to connect the two cities. The game featured over 100 licensed cars consisting of tuners, muscle cars, exotics, race cars and SUVs. Manufactures ranged from Alfa Romeo to Volkswagen and there were over thirty manufactures in the game.
Before September 8, 2010, after reaching level 10 and access to only first tier and some second tier cars, the player would not be able to progress further in the game and would cease to earn any more experience points or cash. To continue the game, the player had to purchase a 'Starter Pack'. Without it, the player was allowed to play the game for as long as he or she wants, but they would cease to earn experience and cash.[3][4] On September 8, 2010 World passed one million registrations. To celebrate that, the game was made completely free-to-play and the level cap was removed.[5]
In the initial release version 4 (July 20, 2010), car performance could be improved via street or pro upgrade kits (purchased with in game cash), depending on the car. Some cars only had street upgrade kits as an option, and the fastest car in the game at the time, the BMW M3 GTR, did not have any upgrade kits. The game also had 'driver skills', 3 of which directly improved performance (acceleration, handling, top speed) and applied to any car that a player was driving. The skills unlocked as a player leveled up and a player could select up to 49 of 81 possible skills.[3] Once a skill was chosen, it couldn't be undone, and players would have to start with a new driver or account and level up again in order to choose a different set of skills. In November 2010, with version 5, the upgrade kits were removed and replaced by performance parts, each car having its own set of performance parts.[6] In May 2012, 'driver skills' were removed from the game and replaced with skill mods, each car having its own set of skill mods. There were no performance skill mods to replace the acceleration, handling, and top speed skills, so the cars ended up being slower. The lowest rated parts or skill mods could be directly purchased for free using in game 'cash', but higher rated parts or skill mods could only be won by chance from card packs, either free 'lucky draw' card packs rewarded at the end of any event, or card packs purchased with real money converted into the games microtransaction currency called 'speed boost'.[7][8]
On March 16, 2011, visual aftermarket parts were made available, and later added to lucky draw in December, 2011. All the in-game cash bodykits from previous versions were removed. Most body kits required SpeedBoost to purchase on May 31, 2011. There were several choices of customisation, some which were exclusive to specific cars. Along with body kits there were spoilers, wheels, neons, hoods, window tint and license plates. Most of these parts, like bodykits, had to be paid with by SpeedBoost. Players could also redeem gifts that they could equip to their cars.
On March 31, 2011, Electronic Arts introduced a new game mode called Team Escape, a semi-cooperative version of a police pursuit where up to four players participated in a sprint from point A to point B while avoiding numerous cops, within a set time limit depending on the event. For this mode, two team versions of the game's power-ups were released.
On July 26, 2011, a feature called Treasure Hunt was released. In Treasure Hunt, played during free roam, players would attempt to collect fifteen gems located in various areas. If the player collected all fifteen gems daily, they would get boosts of reputation and in-game cash. Playing the Treasure Hunt mode daily would build up what was known as a Treasure Hunt Streak. Players earned random high-end performance parts or additional power-ups after completing every hunt based on the day count of the streak.
On October 16, 2012, drag racing was introduced to World. This mode allowed players to race other players to the finish line in various strips of straight roads. Players would need to use manual transmission and shift their way to the finish. Automatic transmission was also available to the players. Single-player mode was also made available with in-game traffic.
On April 10, 2013, an opportunity to win valuable in-game rewards by completing various achievements was introduced.[9] The old player achievement system that only showed a players stats was dropped, and replaced with the milestone based achievement reward mode.
The game was first announced to be free-to-play. In October 2009, World was opened to public beta-testing limited to residents of Taiwan. There have been seven closed beta sessions in total. Except the first one, all were available worldwide to residents who sign up, meet admission criteria, and get accepted.
The main part of the game's map was completed on October 26, 2010, when the final three areas (Downtown Rockport, Kempton, Fortuna) and the Turnpike bridge were added to the map.
Over time, the priority on game development transitioned into focusing on increasing revenue, so plans such as adding Carbon's canyons to the map, completion of the final link area, addition of NFS Undercover's map to the game, ... , were dropped and eventually most of the development focused on adding more cars to the game, since the cars helped increase revenue, and the game evolved into a 'pay to win' game as the best cars could only be purchased with real money.[10]
The EA Canada NFS World team, later named Quicklime Games, which was in charge of game development, maintenance and updates, was shut down on April 25, 2013.[11]
On September 10, 2013, a Community Manager announced that Easy Studios (developers for Battlefield Play4Free) took over from what was left of the Quicklime Game team.[12]
Reception | ||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Need for Speed: World was met with mixed reviews. It received a score of 63.83% on GameRankings[13] and a score of 62/100 on Metacritic.[14]
The highest praise of the game came from GamingXP, which commented that 'The game feels like a combination of previous Need for Speed games except the single player has been cut off. Add some role-play elements and you have a racing MMO.'[20] PC Format gave a somewhat mediocre review in their October 2010 issue, concluding that the game 'feels like a missed opportunity.'[21]Eurogamer commented that 'It's a real shame that the MMO aspect of World is effectively a needlessly elaborate lobby.'[22] In November 2012, World surpassed twenty million registered users.[23]
On April 15, 2015, EA announced that on July 14, 2015 they would be closing Need for Speed: World and turning off services for the game, as the publisher felt 'that the game no longer lives up to the high standard set by the Need for Speed franchise.' The ability to purchase SpeedBoost and create new accounts were disabled since the announcement.[24][25]