F-Zero X

F-Zero X
Numerous hovercars race on a thin straightaway toward the viewer, with "F-Zero X" in stylized capitals above.
North American box art
Developer(s)Nintendo EAD
Publisher(s)Nintendo
Director(s)Tadashi Sugiyama
Producer(s)Shigeru Miyamoto
Artist(s)Takaya Imamura
Composer(s)
  • Taro Bando
  • Hajime Wakai
SeriesF-Zero
Platform(s)Nintendo 64
Release
    • JP: July 14, 1998
    • NA: October 27, 1998
    • EU: November 6, 1998
  • iQue Player:
    • CHN: February 25, 2004
Genre(s)Racing
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

F-Zero X[a] is a 1998 futuristic racing video game for the Nintendo 64 console, developed and published by Nintendo. It is a sequel to the original F-Zero (1990), and is the first F-Zero installment with 3D graphics. The game has a steep learning curve and its gameplay experience is similar to that of the original. An Expansion Kit, including a track and vehicle editor, was released in Japan in 2000.

F-Zero X introduced the ability to attack other racers, a Death Race mode, and a random track generator called the "X Cup". In the Death Race, the player's objective is to rapidly annihilate or pass the 29 other racers, and the X-Cup generates a different set of tracks each time played. Critics generally praised F-Zero X for its fast gameplay, abundance of courses and vehicles, track design, and maintaining a high framerate, although it has been widely criticized for its lack of graphical detail. F-Zero X was ported in 2004 to the iQue Player and had re-releases through the Virtual Console for Wii in 2007, later on Wii U, and through Nintendo Switch Online + Expansion Pack, featuring online multiplayer, in 2022.
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