I wouldn't go so far as to call
Need for Speed: Shift 2 Unleashed the best looking game in the long-running franchise (I believe that recognition goes to last year's superb
Hot Pursuit), but it comes damned close. This game deserves kudos for the gritty, violent aesthetic applied to the general presentation. This shift in tone is readily apparent less than ten seconds after the first load screen;
Need for Speed: Shift was all about putting you in the driver's seat, and
Shift 2 Unleashed is clearly all about terrifying you while you're in the driver's seat. The cars look sleek and sexy, and there's a ton of environmental variety. The best part of
Shift 2 Unleashed's visuals takes one of
Need for Speed: Shift's best innovations a bit further. I'm talking, of course, about the first-person helmet cam. There seems to be a bit of artificial intelligence behind this perspective; as you approach each turn, your driver's head turns ever so slightly, as if he's preparing himself for the insane lateral g-forces he's about to inflict upon his body. Oh, and don't even get me started on the horrifying violence of the first-person crashes.
Shift 2 Unleashed would make a great companion piece for those traumatizing driver's ed gorefests. Regardless of which camera angle you're using, each crash is disorienting; the screen blurs, the colors wash out, and you lose your bearings for a good five seconds. It's impressive. Even more impressive are the speed effects; there's a real sense of danger as the camera shakes and the screen blurs. Bits of dirt even collide with the "lens."
I can't really fault Shift 2 Unleashed's sound effects. The cars sound great, whether they're roaring down the track or literally rolling down it. As much as I can praise the sound effects, I can't quite say the same about the soundtrack. Don't get me wrong, I like Jimmy Eat World and Rise Against just fine; I just think it's more than a little pretentious to set samples of their songs against a dark synth orchestral backdrop for the menu screens. There's also a bit of voice acting from real drivers, but I rarely appreciate this kind of thing in a game like this unless they do something really special with it -- like they did in DiRT 2.