So there is this movie where a guy from "Top Gear" compares driving in Gran Turismo 4 and in real life on Laguna Seca.
Aside from it being a generally interesting movie, it got me thinking. I played just about every popular racing game there is. Nascar, GT series, Forza, NFS(back from the 1st one)...you name it.
I stumbled on LFS a couple of months back, and, like many of us, tried to collect the jaw from my floor for the first couple of days. The level of realism was simply astounding for me!
It took me a couple of months to decide to switch to the S2 license, and I damn am I happy I did! There is so much depth to this game, so much realism, that I believe I will hardly ever switch to another racing game.
But personal talk aside, the guy in this video drove a 1:41 on Laguna Seca in Honda NSX. In real life, he only managed 1:57(!) That is a huge difference in time. I know that there is room for improvement(on the GTi, I was able to come down to 1:34 in a month, but I think that is my limit, due to the fact that I use a gamepad), but he is a skilled driver, and yet the guy lost 16 seconds!
He goes on to say that, first of all, it's the fear factor. He can't physically avoid the fear of braking late before the screwcork turn. Second, GT doesn't simulate certain physical aspects, such as brake heating.
Now, this got me thinking. What if he tried the same thing, but in Live for Speed? Would the realism level in LFS be good enough to, say, make him drive just a few seconds difference between virtual and real life?
For one, I believe it'd be definetely more realistic. We know that, that's why we love LFS. I even believe that LFS simulates a part of the fear factor. Even on the GTi, in my first weeks, I couldn't put myself to break late enough. Or that feeling when this light car is doing 190km/h and you can almost feel that one mistake with the brake, one wrong turn of the wheel, one shift-down too quick and you're gonna end up against the wall. It's beautiful.
It got me wondering, if maybe we can write the guys at "Top Gear" to try out LFS, and see what would they come up with?
Aside from it being a generally interesting movie, it got me thinking. I played just about every popular racing game there is. Nascar, GT series, Forza, NFS(back from the 1st one)...you name it.
I stumbled on LFS a couple of months back, and, like many of us, tried to collect the jaw from my floor for the first couple of days. The level of realism was simply astounding for me!
It took me a couple of months to decide to switch to the S2 license, and I damn am I happy I did! There is so much depth to this game, so much realism, that I believe I will hardly ever switch to another racing game.
But personal talk aside, the guy in this video drove a 1:41 on Laguna Seca in Honda NSX. In real life, he only managed 1:57(!) That is a huge difference in time. I know that there is room for improvement(on the GTi, I was able to come down to 1:34 in a month, but I think that is my limit, due to the fact that I use a gamepad), but he is a skilled driver, and yet the guy lost 16 seconds!
He goes on to say that, first of all, it's the fear factor. He can't physically avoid the fear of braking late before the screwcork turn. Second, GT doesn't simulate certain physical aspects, such as brake heating.
Now, this got me thinking. What if he tried the same thing, but in Live for Speed? Would the realism level in LFS be good enough to, say, make him drive just a few seconds difference between virtual and real life?
For one, I believe it'd be definetely more realistic. We know that, that's why we love LFS. I even believe that LFS simulates a part of the fear factor. Even on the GTi, in my first weeks, I couldn't put myself to break late enough. Or that feeling when this light car is doing 190km/h and you can almost feel that one mistake with the brake, one wrong turn of the wheel, one shift-down too quick and you're gonna end up against the wall. It's beautiful.
It got me wondering, if maybe we can write the guys at "Top Gear" to try out LFS, and see what would they come up with?