Through the game, Atomica makes frequent reference to Elite drivers: mythical beasts who know every shortcut and trick ramp in Paradise City, and who can use them all during races and burning routes. These are drivers who can go from one side of Paradise to the other in one long linked-trick run. The aim of the game is to keep winning events, to keep pushin' for the fortune and fame until you become one of these drivers.
You are initially given a learner licence and, in liberal Paradise City, this allows you to drive anywhere in the city, with no accompanying qualified driver. As you would expect, if you put a learner driver in the seat of a powerful automobile, crashes are inevitable. As you win events, your licence will be upgraded. If you have a USB camera, you'll be able to update your licence picture with each event win. Damn my Firewire iSight!
To start with, like all players in Paradise I have no car, so I'm your charity case. Atomica steps up to the mark and gives me my first car, a Hunter Cavalry. This 1970s’ muscle car is a basic vehicle, good for jumps and stunts. To start with it's pretty beat up. All cars in Paradise are obtained from junkyards, often because you've put them there in an acquisitive ‘shut down’ - Atomica will inform you that there is a certain car cruising the streets, and you have to find it and smash it into a wall. It is then taken to a junkyard, where you can pick it up next time you are passing by. There are five junkyards in Paradise, but no matter which one you visit, the car you just wrecked is there waiting for you. That just doesn't make sense to me, I must be losing my mind!
Another way to improve your car collection is to win events. Events are broken into several main types. You must win a certain number of events to upgrade your licence, and each time you upgrade, the events map is wiped clean, and you can enter the same event again with a tougher target or better opponents. You don't win a new vehicle for every event, but you do for winning certain events, and the vehicle can be picked up next time you visit a junkyard.
Events are entered by stopping at an intersection (road junction for us Brits), which are typically identified by the traffic lights above them, and pressing both the brake and accelerator shoulder buttons. Not all intersections have an event, but ones that do have are clearly marked on your map with a dot, the colour of which indicates the type of event.
The main type of event in Paradise is racing - that is to say that there is more of this type of event than any other. Because each licence requires more event wins than the previous one, you can win your earlier licences by entering entirely your favoured kind of event. Later licences will require more wins than are available in a single event category, so you'll have to step outside this comfort zone.