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Publisher: EA Games
Developer: Papyrus

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Platform Release Date Ave Rating
PC PC 1 June 1989 -

Encylopedia Article

Indianapolis 500: The Simulation is a 1989 computer game. It was hailed as the first step of differentiating racing games from the arcade realm and into true simulations. It was made by the Papyrus Design Group and distributed by Electronic Arts. It first released for DOS and later for the Amiga in 1991.

Indianapolis 500: The Simulation attempts to be a full simulation of the Indianapolis 500 race, with 33 cars and appropriate Indy car "feel". While racing, it only offers a first-person perspective, but the game offers a replay mode as well. Indy 500 offers the ability to realistically set up the car, and any changes made to the car directly affect how it handles.

The field is represented as realistic and the qualifying order stays true to the 1989 Indianapolis 500 starting grid, with one exception: the player's car, numbered 17, replaces Car #29 of Rich Vogler, who qualified in 33rd and last place.

Overview

The game offers four race settings:

  • 10-lap race (no damage, no yellow flags)

  • 30-lap race (no damage)

  • 60-lap race

  • 200-lap race

    There are also practice and qualifying settings. Practice enables car setups to be altered and tested in real time. Choosing not to participate in the qualifying session results in one starting at the back of the field. The qualifying session requires four laps to be completed, with the mean value of the four lap times determining the qualifying position. No car damage can occur during a Practice session, although other cars may be present on the track and their wreckage remains on the track if the player's car collides with them at any point. Car damage can occur during qualifying sessions.

    The cars one can drive are a yellow Penske-Chevrolet, a red Lola-Buick, or a blue March-Cosworth, with the Penske having the fastest default setup (but if one sets the car up well, any of the above racecars can compete effectively). Various settings can be changed during Practice from menus associated with Function keys F3-F10. One's own car is always numbered 17.

    Indy 500's theme music was produced by Rob Hubbard, who at the time was new to Electronic Arts as a music director.

    Car Setup

    A wide and realistic variety of car settings can be altered during Practice in order to change car performance. In Practice mode, changes take immediate effect, making comparisons between even the slightest changes straightforward, and any number of "testing" laps can be driven (all of which are timed, again helping comparisons to be made). During Qualifying and Race sessions, however, no settings except Turboboost and the anti-roll bars can be altered except while stopped in the pits, and some settings are unchangeable even then.

    The settings are assigned to Function keys F3-F10, and changes are made using the Space Bar and "" keys:

  • F3 - FUEL

  • * Between 5 and 40 gallons can be selected, in increments of 5. At 5 gallons, a yellow fuel light flashes on the instrument panel. An approximate miles-per-gallon ratio is constantly updated.

  • F4 - WINGS

  • * Front and rear wing height can be adjusted on a sliding scale.

  • F5 - RUBBER

  • * Soft, Medium or Hard tyres can be selected for each wheel. The real-time tyre temperature is shown alongside this.

  • F6 - STAGGER

  • * A measurement of the bias on the left- or right-hand side. Adjustable on a 0.1 inch scale from -1 inch (left-hand side lower) to +1 inch.

  • F7 - PRESSURES

  • * Adjustable for each tyre, from 16 PSI to 33 PSI.

  • F8 - SHOCKS

  • * Shock absorbency on each wheel, adjustable on a sliding scale from "Soft" to "Firm".

  • F9 - CAMBERS

  • * Vertical alignment for each wheel. Adjustable on a 0.25 degree scale from -3 degrees to +3 degrees.

  • F10 - GEARS

  • * Gear ratios for 1st to 4th gears, calibrated in tenths on the basis of 4th gear (adjustable from 2.80 to 4.90).

    Real-time data for the Inner, Middle and Outer temperatures of each tyre can be seen on F7 and F9.

    The Turboboost setting can be changed at any time, using number keys 1-9. This determines the ratio of fuel to air that is sent to the engine, with 9 being the most fuel and 1 being the least. Increasing this setting increases speed, but lowers fuel efficiency, and in some cases can overheat the engine.

    The anti-roll bars are found in the lower left area of the control panel. They work much in the same way as the shocks do. Unlike the shocks, however, they can be changed at any time during a race, and changing them does not affect other settings.

    Replay mode

    The replay mode offers the chance to review the previous 20 seconds of racing. The camera angles available are:

  • In-car (very similar to while driving)

  • Behind (camera positioned behind one's car, following it from a fixed POV)

  • Track (camera positioned at intervals on the outside walls)

  • TV (simulated television cameras)

  • Sky ("helicopter" view)

  • Leader/Crash (TV-style camera focuses on either the leader of the race, or, if a crash occurs, the car that crashed)

    Crashes and Retirements

    The 32 computer-controlled cars can crash at any point in the race, or retire with mechanical problems during pit-stops. In a 10-lap race, a crash causes a yellow flag to flash briefly in the top left of the screen, but all cars continue racing at full speed as if still under "green-flag" conditions. In all other race distances, yellow flags flash, cars slow down and are forbidden from passing until the incident is cleared. A crashed car typically stays on the circuit for 2-3 laps before being cleared, after which green flags flash as the leader exits turn 4, signaling that cars may continue racing. No yellow flags are shown if one's own car crashes, unless other cars hit the wreckage. During a yellow flag period, speeds are restricted to approximately 90mph (against a typical race pace of up to 230mph).

    One's own car cannot be damaged by crashes in 10-lap or 30-lap races. In the longer races, excessively hard contact with a wall, fence or another car can cause wheel and/or engine damage. It is still possible to recover to the pits after damaging one front wheel, though the car is more difficult to control. Destruction of any two tyres makes recovery extremely difficult, and in most cases impossible. A very large impact, especially to the rear of the car, may cause engine damage, from which there is no recovery. After being involved in a crash, computer-controlled cars are shown as "Crashed" in the Standings screen.

    Retirements may also occur due to mechanical problems. If a car suffers mechanical problems, it will pull into the pits and remain there for the rest of the race. The problem that caused the car to retire are shown on the standings screen. Possible causes of retirement are: Bearing, Clutch, CV Joint, Engine, Gearbox, Ignition, Stalled, Valve, Vibration, Radiator and Oil Leak. Again, this only applies to computer-controlled cars; the player-controlled car does not suffer from random failures.

    PC version settings

    Indy 500, at its maximum settings, offered VGA graphics and AdLib sound. It also could run in EGA and CGA graphics settings, and sound also could be transmitted through the PC speaker. The game is copy-protected using a simple manual-based question-and-answer method common with many other games of the period.

    Commodore Amiga Version

    An Amiga version of Indy 500 was released in late 1990. It ran from a single floppy disk, and was copy-protected using a simple manual-based question-and-answer method common with many other games of the period.

    The game was identical to the MS-DOS version except in minor details. For example, an error in programming resulted in there being two cars numbered 20; in the MS-DOS version, one of these was numbered 12, correctly reflecting the 1989 Indianapolis 500 grid. Certain minor bugs were removed: in the MS-DOS version, for example, making slight contact with a retired car in the pit-lane resulted in it moving sideways at a slow pace, through other cars, walls and other solid objects, and eventually "wrapping round" and appearing again from the opposite side. However, occasional errors, such as fast cars "passing through" much slower cars without harm, and one's own car briefly locking on to others if slight contact was made, remained.

    One instant replay could be saved to disk, as could up to three car settings. However, partly completed races could not be saved. Car control was via mouse, joystick or keyboard; mouse gave a particularly smooth, natural driving feel, and mouse sensitivity could be customised from the main menu.

    References

    External links

  • Wikipedia logo This article is from Wikipedia – the free encyclopedia that anyone can edit. The text is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License and uses material from the Wikipedia article Indianapolis 500: The Simulation. You can edit this article here.

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