Race and battle in Rayman’s universe
- NA release: 1st October 2002
- EU release: N/A
- JP release: N/A
- Developer: Ubi Pictures
- Publisher: UbiSoft
- NGC Magazine Score: N/A
- Mods Used: Widescreen Hack


The cinematic opening to a video game needs to excite the player, but it also needs to inform the players of what to expect. Make it too exciting and people may be disappointed about the actual game. The opening of Rayman Arena depicts an interesting concept: it’s an on-foot race that can turn into an all-out battle at any point, before you need to start racing again. Seems like a neat concept. Get into the main menu and you’ll quickly notice that racing and battling are completely independent from each other.

I want to get the battles out of the way first. They’re horrible. You just hit each other, respawning when you lose all your hearts and the person with the highest number of hits at the end of the obscenely long matches wins. There are power ups across the level, but it’s best to completely ignore them, as Arena has a very accurate lock on mechanic. Lock on and fire as quickly as possible and no opponent will be able to keep up, then just keep blasting them as they respawn.

Racing is a little bit better, but feels very much on-rails. There are different routes to choose from, but the races never get exciting. One thing that doesn’t help is that your character has “speed trails”, which makes the slowness of the game even more absurd. The levels themselves look nice visually, but it just feels like the game is playing itself. If this game was a minigame in a main Rayman game, it might be acceptable, but as its own game, it’s not good at all. Strangely, the GameCube and Xbox versions were not released in Europe (the PS2 version was called Rayman M over here).

Poor
It’s not that Rayman Arena suffers from horrible gameplay design. The real problem is that there is just so little to it. The core gameplay mechanics, level design, and everything about the title is mostly superficial. It’s an okay title for a rainy day or something you could play alongside some other party titles for variance, but I could only recommend renting it under these circumstances. And, even then, it’s better suited for the younger audience, which won’t be so quick to judge its clunkier controls and simple design.
Fran Mirabella III, IGN
Remake or remaster?
It could be a bonus in a Rayman collection.
Official Ways to get the game
There is no official way to get Rayman Arena.

Europe

Japan

North America
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