Data Jammers: FastForward game banner

Data Jammers: FastForward

Free to Play
Release Date:
Developer:
Digital Eel
Publisher:
Digital Eel
Platforms:
Windows Mac
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About This Game

Data Jammers: FastForward is a continuously moving three dimensional driving and destruction game set within a retro wireframe world of impossible race tracks. Prowl twisting bitstreams amidst bizarre geometrical environments enhanced by otherworldly soundscapes as your nimble avatar encounters more dangerous denizens, hazards and boss guardians along the way!

You are a Data Jammer...specifically a D.O.O.D. (Digital Operative, Optical Data), an elite virtual commando tasked with one purpose: Infiltrate the virtual Vaults of Ouroboros, the Military Industrial Complex, and take down The System!

The Deep Grid. The Wilderness. You've heard the hushed rumors about a "network behind the network"; a sub-cyber matrix of covert datastreams utilized solely by the Dark Powers of the world. Now, after several risky excursions beyond vast Pulsor City, you know the truth --Ouroboros exists! In defiance, you have trained to work for the Good Guys to preserve Freedom by defeating the devious Grid Guardians, exposing the sinister secrets of those evil villains who use it to conspire and oppress!

From the makers of Brainpipe: A Plunge to Unhumanity, Weird Worlds: Return to Infinite Space, Dr. Blob's Organism, and Strange Adventures in Infinite Space.

Key features:

  • Zen-inducing frenetic arcade gameplay
  • Arresting 3D visuals and audio
  • Mindbending race tracks
  • Increasingly challenging environments, critters and hazards per level
  • Easy to learn and play
  • Brisk play sessions
  • Excellent replayability
  • Hands on tutorial
  • Supports game controller and good ol' fashioned keyboard

Screenshots

User Reviews

Very Positive
22 user reviews
91%
Positive
1 hrs at review
Recommended

Data Jammers: FastForward is a decent arcade game that can be finished in less than an hour. There's not a whole lot here, although anyone who enjoys seeing their name at the top of online leaderboards might like this. Data Jammers is a simple game: you steer a little vehicle along a a colorful track, picking up scoring orbs, avoiding obstacles, and grabbing powerups like shields and bombs that can be used to destroy enemies. Score lots of points, don't die, and you'll see your name up in lights on the leaderboards. That's all there is to do with Data Jammers: FastForward. And with only about 15 total levels, you'll do it all really quickly. The controls are tight and the action is fast, so at least the whole thing works the way it should. If you really want to play Data Jammers: FastForward, wait for a sale.

20 helpful
8 min at review
Recommended

This is a fun little abstract racing game, suitable for quick playing, though there's an entire campaign built in. There are powerups, bombs, that kind of fun stuff, and it appears to be single player only, but it's smooth, fast, seems very stable, and, most importantly, I'm enjoying it.

7 helpful
3 hrs at review
Not Recommended

Expensive game! I've played around two hours and that's completing every level around five times. I have a hard time figuring out the point of it, and I have a hard time recommending it unless you want some easy achievement. But even on the achievement side this game has some of those stupid leaderboard achievement.

2 helpful
3 hrs at review
Recommended

It's faster.

1 helpful
1 hrs at review
Recommended

It's the future of videogames you all forgot to make, you great big colossal fools. At least Digital Eel eventually got round to making up for all your silly mistakes. All of you. Everone who drifted and made -other- games. It's your fault the future isn't DATA. I hate you for that. I love Data Jammers though.

1 helpful
57 min at review
Recommended

In the trail of music/racer hybrids like Audiosurf, Data Jammers: FastForward ditches gimmicry for polish--and that choice benefits the final product in many levels. The lanes system lends the gameplay more precision when it comes to grabbing collectibles or avoiding enemies, but the controls don't suffer from the apparent limitations--some nonrelated depth issues aside, they're silky smooth. New mechanics are introduced at a gentle pace, and twisted to some cool results in boss battles; that's where a puzzle component gets into play, and even when it occasionally frustrates, the satisfaction feeling after "solving" a battle is what stays with the player. More value is added to the experience through some lovely useless "lore" of sorts: before each level, data on possible enemies and their motivations create an interest for what's to come--even if only for curiosity sake. Ultimately Data Jammers never crosses the "flow" line due to small balance issues; but the trip is a pleasant on...

62 hrs at review
Recommended

I have played this game since it's inception and have had many hours of fun with it. It's clean brilliant design is flawless and it's just frustrating enough to keep playing it over and over. Part of me would LOVE to see a sequel but the other part feels like the game is too perfect that the second iteration would only be disappointing. Super great job guys. Frank Y.

54 min at review
Not Recommended

If you played Audiosurf, then you can get how each level is setup. The only differences are that: [olist] [*]You're not moving to the rhythm of music [*]Some of the paths will fork, forcing you to choose for a while until they join again [*]Nothing is planned [/olist] ...and it's that last difference that makes [i]all[/i] the difference. Couple that with a couple of other factors: [list] [*]Pickups to collect will be aligned adjacent to each other, forcing you to choose. [*]The enemies will be clustered near some pickups in the level, creating "suicide spots" [/list] ...and this game has the formula to make it pointless to play if you're trying to go for the goals on each level. Since all of this changes each time you play the same level, there's no way to practice, and even if you did, there are those "suicide spots" and "pickup forks" you can't do anything about. Don't get me wrong: the game [i]can[/i] be fun...if they ever bothered to fix those glaring flaws There are a couple...

2 hrs at review
Recommended

Fun, straightforward little arcade game. Easy to beat and get achievements. Doesn't have lasting value, but if you have 5-10 minutes to kill and want something light and fast, this will fit the bill.

1 hrs at review
Recommended

Great game, highly recommended!

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System Requirements

FAQ

How much does Data Jammers: FastForward cost?

Data Jammers: FastForward is completely FREE to play. You can download and play it without any purchase.

What are the system requirements for Data Jammers: FastForward?

System requirements are not available for Data Jammers: FastForward.

What platforms is Data Jammers: FastForward available on?

Data Jammers: FastForward is available on Windows PC, macOS.

Is Data Jammers: FastForward worth buying?

Data Jammers: FastForward has 91% positive reviews from 22 players.

When was Data Jammers: FastForward released?

Data Jammers: FastForward was released on Oct 24, 2011.

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