Driver: Parallel Lines

Driver: Parallel Lines
PS2/Xbox cover art featuring player-protagonist TK driving during a cop chase, with the Empire State Building in the background
Developer(s)Reflections Interactive[a]
Publisher(s)Atari (PS2 and Xbox)
Ubisoft (PC and Wii)
Director(s)Tanner Harvey
Designer(s)Craig Lawson
Programmer(s)Gary Ushaw
Writer(s)Neil Richards
Maurice Suckling
Composer(s)Marc Canham
Andy Gannon
Ed Scorggie
SeriesDriver
Platform(s)
ReleasePlayStation 2 & Xbox
  • NA: 14 March 2006
  • EU: 17 March 2006
  • AU: 23 March 2006
Wii & Windows
  • NA: 26 June 2007
  • AU: 28 June 2007
  • EU: 29 June 2007
Genre(s)Racing, third-person shooter, action-adventure
Mode(s)Single-player

Driver: Parallel Lines is a 2006 action-adventure video game developed by Reflections Interactive as the fourth installment in the Driver video game series, following Driver 3 (2004). It was released by Atari for PlayStation 2 and Xbox, followed by ports to Microsoft Windows and Wii released in 2007 by Ubisoft, which had purchased the franchise.[2] In a departure from previous titles in the series that focused on multiple cities, Parallel Lines takes place in New York City, within the periods of 1978 and 2006, in a fully open world environment.

Driver: Parallel Lines was the first Driver game without undercover cop John Tanner as the protagonist, instead focusing on a getaway driver named TK who works with a gang but is later framed by them for the murder of a drug lord, returning after 28 years in prison for revenge. Due to the underwhelming performance of Driver 3, particularly the often-derided on-foot sections, Parallel Lines returns to the formula used in earlier games in the series, focusing on driving, although shooting remains in the game. The game received mixed reviews, with praise mainly going to its 1970s soundtrack, cinematic presentation, and city atmosphere and transition, but with certain elements of its driving, shooting and graphics criticised. It was followed up by a largely similar prequel, Driver 76 (2007), and later Driver: San Francisco (2011).

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference barcelona was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ "Ubisoft acquires the Driver franchise". Engadget. 14 July 2006. Retrieved 9 September 2024.


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