
The Deluxe Founder’s Pack (US$49.99) includes early access to Disney Speedstorm, three racer unlocks (Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, Mulan), an additional racer unlock of the player’s choice, 7,000 Tokens, two Golden Pass credits, exclusive founding member racing suits (Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, Mulan, and the chosen racer), exclusive founding member kart liveries (Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, Mulan, and the chosen racer), and an exclusive founder’s motto and avatar. The Standard Founder’s Pack (US$29.99) includes early access to Disney Speedstorm, two racer unlocks (Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck), an additional racer unlock of the player’s choice, 4,000 tokens (in-game currency), two Golden Pass credits, exclusive founding member racing suits (Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, and the chosen racer), exclusive founding member kart liveries (Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, and the chosen racer), and an exclusive founder’s motto and avatar. Pre-orders are now open for three Founder’s Packs: the Standard Founder’s Pack, Deluxe Founder’s Pack, and Ultimate Founder’s Pack. Each character has unique skills to master and stats that can be upgraded. The cast includes characters such as Captain Jack Sparrow, Mulan, Mickey Mouse, Sulley, and the Beast (it’s not like I’m over here waiting for Belle in Dreamlight Valley or anything). I’m talking the docks from Pirates of the Caribbean, the wilds of The Jungle Book, the Great Wall of China from Mulan, and the Scare Floor from Monsters, Inc. It’s set on circuits inspired by Disney and Pixar worlds. I’m not sure how I feel about this, but I did pay for Dreamlight Valley so I can’t be that hot and bothered by it.ĭisney Speedstorm is best described as a Disney/Pixar-themed combat racing game.
So the same thing will be happening with racing game Disney Speedstorm. I mean, why not? Disney Dreamlight Valley sold like hotcakes when it was first launched the same way, and months later is still finding new players while in paid Early Access (in part due to constant updates, like the Scar update from late last year). Gameloft and Disney seem to have found a groove: release free-to-play games in paid Early Access.