Sega has reignited its previous rivalry towards Nintendo in a spicy trailer for Sonic Racing: CrossWorlds that does not maintain again on its comparisons with Swap 2 launch title Mario Kart World.
In a voiceover for CrossWorlds’ “Come Race on Our Stage” trailer, Sega highlights the variations between the 2 video games, hyping up its sport’s multiverse-spanning racetracks and cross-platform gameplay. The identical voiceover then noticeably sounds bored when referencing the different sport‘s capability to “roam round on the open world” — a transparent nod to Mario Kart World, whose open-world gameplay has garnered a combined response from followers.
What appears to be precise footage of Mario Kart World is even featured in the trailer — though Sega has pixellated the video, presumably to keep away from getting sued.
The thrill ranges from each video games are represented visually with a modern and speedy racecar for Crossworlds, in comparison with a dusty, old style RV for Mario Kart World. One shot exhibits it stall subsequent to a cow (a possible nod to the sport’s breakout Cow character) and a tortoise — an animal not recognized for its velocity.
“Everyone knows that kart racing sport,” the trailer’s voiceover states. “It is nice, we need not present it to you. However what if you happen to might blast by way of and race on an entire different degree? What if you happen to might warp throughout totally different dimensions, totally customise and construct out your machine and compete head-to-head throughout totally different platforms?
“Or, er, what if you wish to… roam round on the open highway…”
Sonic Racing: CrossWorlds launches for PC, PlayStation 4, PS5, Swap 1, Xbox One and Xbox Sequence X/S on September 25, simply six months after the arrival of Mario Kart World on Swap 2.
A Swap 2 model of CrossWorlds can be on the best way, however curiously not this month. Might this be Sega realizing it could do higher to go away extra of a niche between CrossWorlds and Mario Kart World on Swap 2, or has Nintendo instructed it could slightly Sega not launch a direct competitor so quickly?
Whichever is the case, here is hoping Nintendo nonetheless has a humorousness when it sees this.
Tom Phillips is IGN’s Information Editor. You possibly can attain Tom at tom_phillips@ign.com or discover him on Bluesky @tomphillipseg.bsky.social