Beyond the unique setting,
MotorStorm: Arctic Edge turns out to be fairly straightforward as a Racer. You can start off in one of two modes, Festival or Wreckreation. Festival Mode looks like a traditional career or campaign mode, with progressively more difficult challenges, new vehicles and vehicle customizations, new tracks, and specialized challenges. Wreckreation is more along the lines of a typical single-race mode, including options for Time Attack, Free-Play, and Multiplayer. Ad hoc or Online Multiplayer brings the heat (or cold, as it were) for up to eight racers, nice for folks that feel inadequately challenged in the other modes or that can't beat the CPU. Free-Play Mode is a chance to race one of the twelve tracks available in
MotorStorm: Arctic Edge, with custom options like direction, race type, difficulty, and vehicle type. The "Time Ticker" race available as an option here is expanded in Time Attack mode, letting you run each track against the clock using one of eight specialized vehicles.
These lightweight but fun modes are a sidebar to the main action in Festival Mode. Here you race for points that allow you to progress by rank up the chain to contest that offer greater challenge and reward. Certain races contain specialized challenges that award you with stars used to unlock new challenges. Most races push you toward specific vehicles, which you gradually upgrade and expand through unlocking new models. The so-called Garage Mode offers more cosmetic customization than performance tuning, but you also get to check out earned awards, unlocked movies, and driver models. All things considered, MotorStorm: Arctic Edge is a big racing experience that will keep fans engaged and replaying for points and achievements a long, long time.