

Although the game encourages you to be an aggressive to work your way up the pack, it also wants you to be a reasonably careful driver by penalizing you for contact if you have the feature enabled. You can never feel too comfortable in Project Cars 2, especially when playing it as-is right out of the box. Those were feelings that came back in my mind as I switched the game's camera to hood view and let ‘er rip on the pavement. As someone who has counted a rear-wheel drive 300ZX, BMW and Mustang GT among the list of cars to grace my garage through the years, I’m quite familiar with the razor-thin line between control and the lack thereof, especially in poor weather. In the case of Project Cars 2, the game actually reminded me of driving in real life. Playing some driving games feel like, well, playing a game. I also ended up re buying Assetto Corsa with all the dlc - I am just amazed with all the community mods for AC.Then again, that’s a good sign for Project Cars 2. I totally got hooked into these driving games and ended up purchasing a wheel, pedals, shifter, cockpit, VR headset. The Just Drive bundle totally put me in the poor house.

They say this is more of simcade compared to other sims. There's quite a few cars to choose from as well. I'm having to much fun just doing laps around the tracks and trying to learn them. I haven't gotten too far in the career mode of the game.

I'm using a Fanatec wheel and pedal setup to drive with. I ordered an Oculus Quest last week and can't wait to try it out in VR. It's got great support for wheels and pedals and shifters from all the big manufacturers. I like it so much that last week I re-bought it as the Deluxe Edition (it's the version with all the DLC included). I originally bought the Just Drive Humble Bundle which included Project Cars 2.
