Tube Slider
Icon
Free Shipping Within USA and Canada
Icon
1-Year Warranty On all products at RetroFam

Tube Slider - Gamecube Game


$57.58 $103.68 Save $46

1
  • American Express
  • Apple Pay
  • Diners Club
  • Discover
  • Google Pay
  • Mastercard
  • PayPal
  • Shop Pay
  • Visa

Free Domestic Shipping – No Minimums!

  • 1 year Warranty Included
  • Personalized Support (8am to 11pm EST)
♻️

TRADE IN

We actively purchase old consoles, games and accessories

Learn More →

About this Product

The game is fully working. It's the cartridge / disc only.
Tube Slider Gamecube Game 100% Compatible with the Nintendo Wii!

Product Details

UPC: 082472900019
Condition: Used
Genre: Racing
Platform: Nintendo Gamecube
Region: NTSC (N. America)
ESRB: Everyone
SKU: GC_TUBE_SLIDER

This game is fully clean, tested & working. Includes the Disc/Cartridge Only. May have some minor scratches/scuffs. This description was last updated on October 28th, 2020.

Tube Slider

Tube Slider is a 2003 racing video game develop by NDcube and publish exclusively in North America by NEC Interchannel for the GameCube. A Japanese release was planned but cancel for unknown reasons. The game takes place on Earth in the middle of the 21st century, where a new sport base around tube sliding was born out of people's desire for speed and competition, after hydrogen-base energy replace fossil fuels in motorsports. The player can choose between one of eight futuristic formula vehicles, each one varying in terms of performance, and race against computer-control opponents across ten tracks divide into three sessions.

NDcube, a subsidiary of Nintendo that previously worked on F-Zero: Maximum Velocity for Game Boy Advance, originally pitch Tube Slider as an entry in the F-Zero franchise but it was later reworked into a stand-alone game. The team aim to capture the experience of racing down an enclosed tube course, which gave them the ability to design futuristic and complex track structures not found in typical racing games, with the staff conducting research on race tracks and roller coasters during development. Japanese animation studio Studio 4°C were responsible for the game's vehicle designs. The soundtrack was score by Mitsuteru Furukawa, who also work on Maximum Velocity. It garner mix reception from critics since its release.

Description

  • After hydrogen power is finally develop, fossil fuels are ban, are cars are a thing of the past. But people still have the urge to race, and with the technology of a new century, they'll go faster than any gas-power engine ever did!
  • You'll travel through winding mazes of tubes as your racing machine, the Slider, reaches speeds of over 1000MPH
  • Finishing a race takes incredible concentration and reflexes -- but taking home a championship means beating the aggressive computer AI
  • Go up against three other players in the thrilling multiplayer modes -- you'll experience limitless velocities and make decisions in nanoseconds -- can you handle the speed?
Icon
Free Shipping Within USA and Canada
Icon
1-Year Warranty On all products at RetroFam

About this Product

The game is fully working. It's the cartridge / disc only.
Tube Slider Gamecube Game 100% Compatible with the Nintendo Wii!

Product Details

UPC: 082472900019
Condition: Used
Genre: Racing
Platform: Nintendo Gamecube
Region: NTSC (N. America)
ESRB: Everyone
SKU: GC_TUBE_SLIDER

This game is fully clean, tested & working. Includes the Disc/Cartridge Only. May have some minor scratches/scuffs. This description was last updated on October 28th, 2020.

Tube Slider

Tube Slider is a 2003 racing video game develop by NDcube and publish exclusively in North America by NEC Interchannel for the GameCube. A Japanese release was planned but cancel for unknown reasons. The game takes place on Earth in the middle of the 21st century, where a new sport base around tube sliding was born out of people's desire for speed and competition, after hydrogen-base energy replace fossil fuels in motorsports. The player can choose between one of eight futuristic formula vehicles, each one varying in terms of performance, and race against computer-control opponents across ten tracks divide into three sessions.

NDcube, a subsidiary of Nintendo that previously worked on F-Zero: Maximum Velocity for Game Boy Advance, originally pitch Tube Slider as an entry in the F-Zero franchise but it was later reworked into a stand-alone game. The team aim to capture the experience of racing down an enclosed tube course, which gave them the ability to design futuristic and complex track structures not found in typical racing games, with the staff conducting research on race tracks and roller coasters during development. Japanese animation studio Studio 4°C were responsible for the game's vehicle designs. The soundtrack was score by Mitsuteru Furukawa, who also work on Maximum Velocity. It garner mix reception from critics since its release.

Description

  • After hydrogen power is finally develop, fossil fuels are ban, are cars are a thing of the past. But people still have the urge to race, and with the technology of a new century, they'll go faster than any gas-power engine ever did!
  • You'll travel through winding mazes of tubes as your racing machine, the Slider, reaches speeds of over 1000MPH
  • Finishing a race takes incredible concentration and reflexes -- but taking home a championship means beating the aggressive computer AI
  • Go up against three other players in the thrilling multiplayer modes -- you'll experience limitless velocities and make decisions in nanoseconds -- can you handle the speed?

Sell us your games!

We actively purchase old consoles, games and accessories

Learn More Add icon

Tube Slider - Gamecube Game

$57.58

icon

Carefully Sourced

Every unit hand-picked from trusted suppliers worldwide

icon

Deeply Refurbished

Cleaned, tested, and restored to optimal performance

icon

Neatly Packaged

Securely packed to arrive in perfect condition

icon

Quickly Delivered

Fast, free shipping across the US & Canada

You may also like

Retro Family Loves this Product!

0 Reviews
Reviews