Thispage contains a list of cheats, codes, Easter eggs, tips, and other secrets for Need for Speed III: Hot Pursuit for PlayStation. If you've discovered a cheat you'd like to add to the page, or have a correction, please click EDIT and add it.
Enter this code after you've chosen a race, but before the LOADING screen appears.Press and Hold (Just until the loading screen comes up)...Lets your car run down the traffic without slowing down. Select+Square+X
When the RMP loading screen appears press Start, Select, R1 and L2 at the same time. Hold them until the game finishes loading. Now when you honk your horn (by pressing up) you will smash other cars out of the way.
Select the Rocky Pass track. Then before the loading screen appears,immediatly hold right + R1 + L2. keep the buttons held until the loadingscreen disappears. Now during the race the white and blue Jeeps will bereplaced by Crown Victorias. To enable this code on the Summit track, holddown + R1 + L2 while the track loads
Select the Redrock Ridge track. Then before the loading screen appears,immediately hold Down + R1 + L2 continue to hold the buttons until theloading screen disappears. Now the Green Landrovers will be replaced by Gumball police during the race
After selecting the game options, press start to load the race, then beforethe loading screen appears, immediatly hold left + square + circle. Keepthe buttons held until the loading screen disappears. Now the horsepower ofyour car will be boosted by 25%.
Country Woods:
On the Country Woods track,once you get past two or three 90 degree turns, you should come to a really sharp hairpin, (look for it on the map display) once you come to that, you see a little hill of snow off to the side of the road. Go up the hill, then cut the wheel sharp to realign yourself with the track.This gives you an enormous amount of ground!
Empire City:
The first shortcut is almost immediately after you start the race. The shortcut is on the left, right before you see the crane, there is also a street light almost inside the shortcut.
After you come out of the second shortcut there is a cement barrier directly ahead of you. Slightly to the left of this there are several flashing barriers, go through these and follow the path. Be sure to turn to the left so that you can head in the right direction on the track.
The fourth shortcut is after you pass through the lighted tunnel and a row of pillars (the second long row of pillars you have come across). Right after you pass all of the pillars go into the lighted area to the right. Stay in this area until the lights end. Right when the lights end there is a miscolored part of the wall with flyers on it. Run through the wall and you are inside the shortcut.
Hometown:
On the Hometown track, right before the first covered bridge, there's a stretch of grass before and in the turn. Cut through the grass right before the turn, then let the car slide up to the left side of the track, don't get too close to the side of the bridge though.This tip should cut off a few seconds from your time, it will also boost your speed for the upcoming jump.
Red Rock Ridge:
In redrock ridge, there is a shortcut through the hairpin, right before it, there is a place to pull over on the right, drive through there, and powerslide left right before the cactus, then go straight forward through the cleared area, and turn left onto the road. This helps when you're being chased by the cops, they have to take the hairpin, so you can lose them.
The visit isn't likely to be newsworthy in the end. As the highest-upside option in the draft, the 6-foot-1, 219-pound Willis is likely going in the top half of the first round. The Colts don't pick until No. 42, and a trade up, if possible, would cost the assets needed to maximize the two years they've financially and verbally committed to a soon-to-be 37-year-old Matt Ryan.
Colts coach Frank Reich and general manager Chris Ballard are about to break in a fifth quarterback in their five years together. Since Andrew Luck abruptly retired in the 2019 preseason, they've tried nearly everything from in-house candidates (Jacoby Brissett) to signing free agents (Philip Rivers) to trading for veterans (Carson Wentz, Ryan).
The Colts believe that even at 37, Ryan still has the physical skills that made him a four-time Pro Bowler and one-time league MVP with the Falcons. He and they know it won't last forever, but he has two years of fully guaranteed money on his deal, and the two sides have hopes that it can extend into a third season if all is still going well.
That desire, as well as the lack of a first-round pick, make this an unlikely year to draft the heir to Ryan. Although it would be ideal to groom the next starter as a backup to a role model like Ryan, doing it for two or three seasons would cut into the majority of the rookie contract. That's the financial boon that makes having a young quarterback like a cheat code in today's NFL.
Willis could be a rare exception. He draws comparisons to a young Josh Allen by the way he tantalizes scouts with his accelerating speed, thick build, rocket arm and inquisitive mind while also screaming a need for development with his accuracy and mechanics.
Allen's growth in accuracy from his rookie year to the MVP runner-up he was by his third year are a historic outlier. His completion percentage climbed from .528 to .588 to .692, his yards per attempt from 6.5 to 6.7 to 7.9. His growth came in games for the same head coach and offensive coordinator for four straight seasons. Patience and belief drove the miracle.
Perhaps chasing outliers like Allen is a fool's errand, but the AFC is suddenly filled with similar versions of the fully realized Allen, from Patrick Mahomes to Justin Herbert to Lamar Jackson to Deshaun Watson to Joe Burrow to Russell Wilson.
Last January, Allen dueled Mahomes in a divisional playoff game that ended up in a 42-36 final in which the Bills and Chiefs traded four touchdowns in the final two minutes of regulation. That game has become a new baseline for executives around the league: Can our guy compete with that? And if not, how do we find one who can?
Allen posted a 56.2% career completion rate at Wyoming, but his warts still came in a pro-style offense with occasional big games. Willis posted a 62.8% clip at Liberty, where he also ran for 1,822 yards and 27 touchdowns in the past two seasons, but he's coming from a gimmicky offense with a schedule featuring Old Dominion, Campbell, Troy and UMass.
This theoretical path has a recent model to follow, too. Just last year, the 49ers mortgaged drafts to trade up to the No. 3 pick for the chance to take Trey Lance, another dream of a dual-threat prospect who started just one game at North Dakota State the previous season. As a rookie, he sat for all but 71 attempts behind Jimmy Garoppolo, who led the 49ers to another NFC Championship Game appearance.
The 49ers appear ready to hand the reins over to Lance after one season, though they have yet to part with Garoppolo. He has a contract that's cuttable or tradeable, so the out was always there in a way it isn't and shouldn't be after one season with Ryan.
If the Colts were able to jump on Willis, it'd likely be because he fell to the back half of the first round and they were willing to commit to two full years of him on the bench. The idea makes sense if they're willing to spend free-agent dollars on positions they'd be losing picks to find, like they just did by signing former Eagles safety Rodney McLeod.
But it's noteworthy that the Colts keep inching closer to the first round. They moved up nine spots to No. 42 as part of the Carson Wentz trade with the Commanders, a move reminiscent of when the Bills traded tackle Cordy Glenn to move up nine spots in the first in their pursuit of Allen in 2018.
Willis is the only quarterback in the draft who displays anywhere near that kind of developmental upside. Ole Miss' Matt Corral comes from a one-read offense, with questions about how much more he is than that. Pittsburgh's Kenny Pickett is a safe operator. Nevada's Carson Strong lacks mobility. Cincinnati's Desmond Ridder has mobility but doesn't make it a large part of his game and also has a safe playing style.
What's more likely is the Colts start looking for these kinds of swings starting next year, when Ryan is entering a contract season and when they have their first-round pick back in what's supposed to be a loaded quarterback draft.
But these are the dreams the Colts are now allowed to entertain with Ryan in the helm. They owe it to the highest goals of the franchise to entertain them, even if the likelihood of it happening feels out of reach.
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