![]() Then again, such an approach is not quite so fitting for the sprint, where stamina conservation is hardly the first thing on an athlete’s mind. The idea works particularly well in the 200m and is further complicated by an additional energy bar in the tricky 400m races. Instead, races require you to keep a gauge in the green to maintain top speed – hammer away as fast as you possibly can, and you’ll overfill the meter, causing your athlete to slow up. Still, it’s refreshing to find that track events are not the kind of puddle-deep button-mashers we’ve grown used to. Its necessarily broad remit is problematic in the sense that no event can possibly receive the same level of attention and care as a game based on a single sport, and so it’s only natural that some events come off better than others.
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