I need TRD3000gt

  • Thread starter Thread starter Supradriver
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I'm sure several people have it, but that wouldn't help you much.

Gold all of your licences and it shall be yours.
 
I have one. But you can't have it! lol :yuck: :P
just kidding of course.
Yeah, you gotta do some hard work to earn the TRD.
 
Hi, ever such a long time since I played this one, was the TRD a worthy prize for getting all the Golds ? I forget lol
 
It's a Supra that has it's act together. It's stiffer, lighter, cooler, and a wee bit less powerful than most Supras.

However, Supra's aren't good at this sort of thing. There are more thrilling Supras, and more composed cars. It feels very special, and pretty good, but it's not worth a huge amount of effort. What matters, really, is whether of not you want to Gold the licenses.

EDIT: Wow! A capitalized verb!

A proper verb?

Re-edit: Crap, Those were my impressions of the car in GT2. Concerning GT1: I've heard it described as "power without control." I'll go check; I've been meaning to get into GT1 anyway.

Final edit: Yup, same thing as in GT2. A very civilized Supra, but not an extremely civilized car. I like mine, but I'm not sure it's worth the effort of Golding license A, if you don't like to Gold. I recommend, if you don't love Licenses, that the best one to try to Gold is actually IA. It's a very fulfilling license that teaches you to just have fun. And the prize car from that is fabulous, if not as wonderful as it indeed should be.
 
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Hi, ever such a long time since I played this one, was the TRD a worthy prize for getting all the Golds ? I forget lol

Yes it is. By far the coolest looking car in GT1 stock. And you won't regret the skills you get from getting golds on all tests.
 
It's a Supra that has it's act together. It's stiffer, lighter, cooler, and a wee bit less powerful than most Supras.

However, Supra's aren't good at this sort of thing. There are more thrilling Supras, and more composed cars. It feels very special, and pretty good, but it's not worth a huge amount of effort. What matters, really, is whether of not you want to Gold the licenses.

EDIT: Wow! A capitalized verb!

A proper verb?

Re-edit: Crap, Those were my impressions of the car in GT2. Concerning GT1: I've heard it described as "power without control." I'll go check; I've been meaning to get into GT1 anyway.

Final edit: Yup, same thing as in GT2. A very civilized Supra, but not an extremely civilized car. I like mine, but I'm not sure it's worth the effort of Golding license A, if you don't like to Gold. I recommend, if you don't love Licenses, that the best one to try to Gold is actually IA. It's a very fulfilling license that teaches you to just have fun. And the prize car from that is fabulous, if not as wonderful as it indeed should be.

"To Gold?" It's not traditionally recognized as a verb, but I went to www.urbandictionary.com and found meaning #4 below:

FTW 1 up, 1 down
An expression used to signify one's belief that the U.S. (or other) economy and stock markey is such danger that investors should turn to gold. Most often translated as "Gold, for the win," the expression also hints at "Gold, **** the world," suggesting every man fend for himself as the state of the economy is headed for collapse.



That's the closest I could come to a verb, although it's nowhere near to the way we use it at GTP. But I'd personally accept "to gold" as being a verb.

Back on topic: YES it is worth trying to win this car. I have a very vague memory of driving it in GT1 and liking it.
 
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The posting in this forum are essentially informal speech. In informal speech it is very common to verb nouns. And, these days, informal usage often move pretty quickly to more formal speech. In some cases the meaning of a verbed noun can be ambiguous, but usually the meaning of any single instance is obvious to the intended audience.

Ignoring that, the challenge is to find some other verbs which are written with a capital letter.
 
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