

Drifting is done by tapping the brake while turning and another tap stops the drift. Tapping the left side of the screen activates braking and tapping the right side activates boost. On mobile devices the game can be controlled by tilting the device for steering along with auto-acceleration.

Stars are used to open up unlocks but in-app purchases for car packs and power-ups are also available. The game also encourages social sharing after completing a race. Similar to the previous game race results are awarded with up to five stars along with the completion of primary and secondary objectives. Game modes include a career mode, and the single race mode where any race at any level can be accessed directly. There are 80 licensed cars available divided over seven tiers. Some of the locations were previously featured in Asphalt 6: Adrenaline (Havana, Nassau, Moscow, New Orleans, New York, Rio de Janeiro, Shanghai and Tokyo) while others are entirely new (Alps, London, Hawaii, Miami and Paris). The game offers 150 events over fifteen tracks. Go around the world competing in races from Brazil to China.Asphalt 7: Heat is an entry in the arcade racing series and the gameplay is largely identical to the previous games.Control your car from your phone as if it were a steering wheel and tap the screen to use the nitro.Explore stunning settings and complete incredible aerial stunts.Eight game modes including Gate Drift, Knockdown and Police Chase.Drive licenced luxury cars such as the Ferrari LaFerrari or the Lamborghini Veneno.Obviously, its developers have had to sacrifice certain secondary graphic details, but the essential things are still there: fast cars, loads of adrenalin to get going, aerial stunts everywhere, a very immersive gameplay and dozens of cheats to be discovered. That's how Asphalt Nitro was born, a game that brings together the best of its predecessor in an APK that weighs less than 30 MB. The guys at Gameloft have decided to get hold of their best racing game, Asphalt 8, and turn it into a lighter title, much more appropriate for low-end Android smartphones and tablets that don't have too many resources available.
