With slick, old school visuals and
even slicker controls (as -LSB-...]
Not exact matches
Control, although not debilitating, ruins what could have been a very
slick title and its similarity to Splinter Cell is brazen,
even down to the tutorial, which is straight out of the Sam Fisher handbook.
Lots of power and the traction
control is great, don't
even have to lock it in when the roads are
slick.
While the system's track feel and
control will have to wait for a warmer month, it's incredibly stable on
slick roads;
even attempts to overcook things lead only to a touch of slip before the system straightens things out and sends you rocketing down the road in proper AMG fashion.
I know
even good winter rear tires aren't a match for
slick roads, but I suspect that you could get things pretty loose on dry summer pavement as well — especially if you flick off the traction
control.
Chevrolet's «Active Handling» system adjusts the suspension to the conditions: Leave the Active Handling and the traction
control engaged, and the Z06 is easy to drive
even on
slick pavement.
43/31 Highway / City MPG Awards * 2017 IIHS Top Safety Pick Reviews * Balances sharp handling with a ride quality that won't beat you up engine choices offer power, smoothness and fuel efficiency interior is upscale and spacious, with logical, easy - to - use
controls Source Edmunds * Exceptionally powerful engine and an optional package that makes
even more power
slick dual - clutch automatic transmission with quick shifts richly trimmed and well - equipped interior impressively supportive and comfortable front seats.
Even the
slick PR machine to constantly stay in the media limelight is unable to maintain full damage
control.
The
controls are
slick and responsive, but can also sometimes be a little to sensitive with
even the merest tweak being enough to send you to your doom.
This is where things get pretty
slick: Tizen detects most commonly used devices like cable / satellite boxes, game consoles, Blu - ray players, and
even external streaming set - top boxes (not that you'd need one), then automatically labels inputs with the name of the device (no more guessing which device is in which HDMI input) and programs the system so you can
control it with the Samsung One remote.
It does all the basics, like choosing quality settings and starting / stopping recording, but what's particularly
slick is the way it periodically polls the action camera to make sure that,
even if you've changed the settings in some other way (such as using its own
controls) they're still accurately reflected on the watch.