Well the Xpand Rally Demo was released on August 26th, 2004 and I finally worked everything out to get it working on my 1280x720 front projector.
In the process of figuring this out, I learned a very important lesson on how DirectX and the monitor work together. When I bought my front projector, it came with no Monitor driver. After a bunch of searching I could not locate a driver for it on the net, but I did come across PowerStrip which gives you the capability of creating a monitor driver. After using it to read the projector and create a driver, I went and tried to get Colin McRae 4 up and running in 1280x720 but struggled forever with it. I found a tool on the net called DXCapviewer which is used for looking at DirectX settings on a system. Using it, I found that I was severly limited in my avaliable DirectX resolutions, maxing out at 1024x768, EVEN though I was running my desktop at 1280x720. After 6 months of struggling with this, I found a post that mentioned the importance of the monitor driver. Seeing as I had PowerStrip build mine, I figured I would revisit PowerStrip and see what I could do.
Instead of having PowerStrip build it from reading the projector settings, I enetered the data in manually using the stats at the back of my projectors manual. This included horizontal and vertical max frequencies, as well as max pixel counts. Even though my projectors native resolution was 1280x720, I entered 1280x1024 as its built in scaler could handle that. After saving the driver and installing it, I was amazed that DXCapviewer was now listing 4 times as many resolutions, all with different frequencies. SUCCESS!! I now could see the holy grail of 1280x720 in the DirectX Settings, which was my issue the whole time with any games running DirectX.
The moral of this story is that if your editing a file in a game to get widescreen capabilities, such as changing 800x600 to 1280x720, make sure that the monitor driver is setup properly and that DXCapviewer can see the resolution your shooting for. If it can't then an error will be shown when you try to run the game.
Now back to explaining how to get XPand Rally Demo up and running...
First download the demo at the following location:
http://www.xpandrally.com/en/show.php?006
Now install the game and then go into its root directory and find the Data directory. In this directory you will find a file called videosettings.scr. Open this with a text editor and locate the lines which have the horizontal and vertical resolutions (half way down the page if I remember correctly). Enter your values (mine were 1280 and 720) AND then make sure you change the frequency, which is defaults to 85. Whatever frequency you saw DXCapviewer list with your desired resolution should be entered here (DXcapviewer had my 1280x720 listed with 60Hz). Save the file and then run the game.
As expected, you will see the game in full resolution, but alas the developers coded it with 4:3 in mind, as everything is stretched out due to the extra width. It would be nice if they had thought of 16:9 sooner. Maybe in a future patch.
Either way, the game is fantastic looking and has some of the nicest driving graphics I've ever seen. It supports 4 players via LAN with (or without - your choice) Collisions, which deviates away from the normal rally type games. You can also set the time of the race, so you could go with noon and have everything sunny, or have it 3 in the morning when its pitch black, at which point you would have to use your front head lights to see (don't hit anything or they will break!!!). The clouds in the sky in this game are unreal, as they float across the sky, casting shadows on the ground as your racing.
As for the quality of game, it is very good. I would place it between being a simulation and an arcade game, leaning more toward the simulation withs its realistic physics. Will this be as realistic as Richard Burns Rally? No, but it is still a blast to play in either Simulation Mode or Arcade Mode. If I was a better driver, I could comment more on the simulation side of things, but I'm not so I won't.
Any ways, if your into racing games and would like to have a game which you can drive off the road and go any place you want, then this game is for you (its a setting within the game to allow you to roam around the whole country side instead of just being limited to the road). Check it out, and play it in widescreen!!!
Darren
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