RolStoppable said:
I haven't played GT5, only the first three games. But I think I can take your word for it that the series hasn't really changed at its core over all those years. I like to think of myself as being good at racing games and the Gran Turismo series is the most boring racing franchise in existence, because there's no real balance whatsoever. Most races are already decided when you reach the first corner of a track, because by that point you can already see that the AI won't be able to keep up. The only way to make races interesting is by deliberately trying to hit the sweet spot of using a similarly powered car as the AI. Endurance races are even worse; it's no fun at all to play the same track for an hour or more and lap the opponents a dozen times. This glaring lack of balance in difficulty always made me believe that Gran Turismo is not meant to be a series for racing fans, but rather people who first and foremost like to look at shiny cars. Racing means fighting for positions, thrill, excitement, adrenaline pumping through your body. Gran Turismo is just driving and buying new cars. The fun aspects of Gran Turismo are tuning your car, spending your money on something. The actual races are just something you endure for the sake of improving your collection of cars. |
Well I think you should play burnout. That's the type of game your looking for. Games like Burnout and Need for speed are great. But it doesn't have the lasting appeal GT has. When I was a kid I used to love crashing into cars e.t.c. but now over the years GT has become much more fun. It's just that people only play a bit of A spec and say they've played GT. When the truth is they haven't. It's like playing the campagin of Halo Reach and saying it's a horrible game. Without even trying the online. Getting your liscence test, A spec, B spec, Online, go carting there's just so much to do! And I like realistic racing. The amazing visuals of GT is a big part of the game I am not denying that. But that so called thrill is very limited for games like burnout or Need for Speed. In 10 min a 12 year old can tell that playing a game like NFS doesn't feel real at all. And in 5 min he can say GT5 is the most realistic racer he has ever played. When playing GT I feel as if I'm driving a real car and that too on the speed of 180km per hour. It feels like a real race is going on. Something that other racers fail too give.