At the end of the level you will come face to face with Bubba, who is drunk, and either urinating, or picking his nose or something, and you have to whack him with your crowbar to finish the level. Occasionally you will come across some traps and obstacles, some mazes and such, but nothing too major. It’s more of a “get from place A to place B”. The main aim of the game is just like any other FPS- you have to fight enemies, find keys which unlock doors and other areas, flip switches and the like. Although the cover of Suckin' Grits on Route 66's box art, with Leonard and Bubba wearing Hawaiian-style shirts, would seem to indicate that they're on vacation, there's little to point out this fact in-game, and doesn't really keep up with this theme. The levels in the expansion include an alligator farm and carnival, shooting range, a brewery, a flea market, a Slaughterhouse & Meat Packing Plant, a fun park, a brothel, dinosaur caves, a camp based on Friday the Thirteenth’s Camp Crystal Lake, an RV Show, a Bigfoot Convention, the Hoover dam, and an alien crash site.
Despite the opinion of some that Suckin' Grits on Route 66 sucks, there are a few good levels. In my opinion, these first few levels, featured in the shareware version too, are some of the best, more suited to the game’s theme, out in the sticks, with farms, livestock, silos, and other things that you would expect to see out in the country.Īfter the first five levels, which are mostly situated in the country and such, other levels in Redneck Rampage include sewers, industrial complexes, factories, a lunatic asylum, abandoned ruins, a mortuary, underground mines, a mansion, and eventually aboard a mother ship. You start off in a place surrounded by hedgerows.