Casual Friday: Gran Turismo Edition

A Need for Speed
Everybody's got a racing freak inside, ready to jam the peddle. Some guys here in the PC World office pimp their rides. Me? I have to settle for watching Speed Racer and playing a couple games. Yeah, I'm a rebel.
Gran Turismo 5: Prologue
(PS3 Console)
You're spending 40 bucks on a high-octane hands-on tease. I'm not joking. The full version of GT 5 won't be available until sometime in 2009. My gut reaction before gunning the engines on my PS3: "There are plenty of finished racing games that don't cost much more. What's the big deal?"
Well, if every game had this complete a demo a year prior to release, I'd consider buying them as well. This slice of GT5 has six tracks, somewhere in the 
Enough jibber-jabber.
If there are any major driving quirks, blame user error--you can dive under the hood and fully adjust the car (gear settings, brakes, tires) to your liking from the options menu between races. However, race fanatics will need a proper racing wheel.
Enter Logitech. Its most recent (and most hyped) wheel, the Driving Force GT, is built specifically for GT5. It ships in a couple weeks, but I got a chance 
But here's something to chew on: GT5 may make its way to PCs as well, according to one story from derStandard (translated from the German here). The move is intended to target the growing Chinese PC gaming market. Makes sense to me--hardcore racing sims got their start on PCs, anyhow.
Now, this got me thinking: What about using the Driving Force GT on your PC as well? I popped it into a PC's USB port, and I heard that familiar chime of device









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