Moanlower wrote:Alonso Fan wrote:Moanlower, I agree with you to an extent, but I would say that grand prix 3 is a very realistic simulator, and yes, I have only driven it with a keyboard but I'm not going off that. I'm going off the fact that it has been driven by real f1 drivers and confirmed that it is one of the most realistic simulators out there.
Yes I agree with you that there is no such confirmed news about forza or gran trismo or any codemasters games
But there are a lot of cars in such games which wouldn't be programmable because no one has actually driven them to the limit before. For example, how would you program a Lamborghini veneno when only 3 have been made and they have all been sold? It would be a difficult task, so I would imagine that you would adjust the physics of one of your Lamborghini aventadors (which the veneno is based on). And yes, then you wouldn't have a very accurate physics for a car even in a simulator, so in that case, how would you judge it with a Logitech g27? Its impossible
Unless of course you have driven the car before
I can't comment on GP3, haven't played that. But there are also many real race drivers that said the same positive things about iracing, and with that sim I have experience with and it's far from realistic. I don't want to break iracing down completely because it has aspects that are really good, but not the physics.
All cars from Assetto Corsa are licenced, which means they have access to all data necessary. Also all tracks are laser scanned. And now with RSRNurburg as a partner, they will be able to correlate all real data from plenty of cars that are already in the sim, combined with track data from those cars on tracks like Spa and Nordschleife. You can't expect much more than that, and everything for 35 euro's ! Now that's insane, especially if you compare to what you get at iracing for 10 or 20 times that money.
btw: What are your pc specs? gpu, cpu ? I really recommend buying a cheap 2nd hand wheel such as a Logitech DFGT for 50 bucks and buy AC. It will be the best money you've ever spend. And if you don't like hard core all aids off, start with abs or stabilty control. You could even set good laptimes with a joypad, but I wouldn't recommend it since it has hidden aids. It also wouldn't be possible to drive a real racecar with a joypad and have accurate and subtle steering and pedal inputs.
yep i agree totally, laser scanned tracks are the best, most accurate. and yes, gp3 has an element of steering help with the keyboard like you said about AC. similar. but not with joypad or steering wheel.
gp4 looks better, with the same physics engine, but damage and tracks arent that realistic (it was released in 2000 and i dont think they had laser scanning/gps tracking for games then)
i just upgraded my pc from:
AMD Athlon 64 X2 Dual Core 5000+ 2.6ghz
4gb ddr2 ram
Onboard graphics, NVIDIA GeForce 6150SE nForce 430
mobo: ECS GeForce 6100pm-m2 v2.0
450w psu
to:
AMD Phenom X4 9750 Quad Core, 2.4ghz
4gb ddr2 ram
Radeon HD 6770 graphics card
mobo: ECS GeForce 6100pm-m2 v2.0
500w psu
the pc with the first specs cost me £30, and to upgrade it to the second set of specs, it cost me around £85
worth it imo.
f1 2013 runs at 30 fps with medium graphics settings, which is enough for me (my cpu and graphics card are fully capable of running ultra graphics at around 50/60 fps but my mobo has limitations, such as socket am2, not am2+, and pci express x16 version 1.x, with a version 2.1 graphics card)
so due to the recent upgrade i'm a bit short on cash at the moment