How to Beat Melancholic Angel in Tokyo Xtreme Racer
So, you’ve hit a wall—figuratively (and maybe literally). Melancholic Angel is standing between you and progress in Tokyo Xtreme Racer, and no matter what you do, she keeps leaving you in the dust.
Don’t worry. Beating her isn’t impossible—it just feels that way.
The Best Car for the Job
RX-8 – Your Ticket to Victory
If you’re struggling, this is the car to use.
It’s fast enough, has solid handling, and can keep up if you drive smart.
S14? 180SX?
They can’t cut it here—not unless you enjoy frustration and losing.
You need something that can hang on during high-speed corners and accelerate fast enough to stay competitive.
The Subaru Alternative
Some players have beaten her with a Subaru—without nitrous.
If you’re feeling bold (or desperate), you can try, but the RX-8 is still the safer choice.
The Strategy for Taking Her Down
1. Start the Race in Ginza (More Traffic = More Chaos)
You want to force her into a mistake.
Ginza’s narrow roads and obstacles can work in your favor.
If you time it right, you can make her brake or swerve, giving you an opening.
2. Beware of the Brake Check
1 out of 4 times, she’ll slam on the brakes right at the start.
If this happens, avoid it at all costs—getting caught behind her early is an instant loss.
If she doesn’t brake-check you? Hit the nitrous immediately and push forward.
3. Use the C1 Loop’s Corners to Your Advantage
Melancholic Angel struggles in corners.
Stay tight on the inside, don’t oversteer, and force her into tough braking spots.
If you can get ahead and block her, she won’t have an easy time passing you.
4. Hope for a Little Luck
Even if you do everything perfectly, luck is a huge factor in this fight.
She might mess up in a tight section or get caught behind traffic—that’s when you pounce.
Keep racing her until the RNG gods finally bless you with a win.
Final Blurb
Beating Melancholic Angel isn’t about raw speed—it’s about strategy, patience, and stubbornness. Use the RX-8, time your nitrous, and take advantage of the course layout.
And if you’re getting frustrated? Just remember—Shuwa Shuwa is worse.
Good luck. You’ll need it.