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Read More About: Game ConsolesFun and Games

Casual Friday: Gran Turismo Edition

Take a Gran Turismo 5 test drive, make some hard turns with new hardware, and check out the hardest (and easiest) games you'll ever play.

Darren Gladstone, PC World

Thursday, April 17, 2008 10:00 PM PDT
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In our ongoing efforts to celebrate slack, here are a few great new ways to kill what little free time you think you have this weekend and beyond.

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?"

GT5 Prologue; click to view full-size image.

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 neighborhood of 70 tunable cars and a whole lot of polish. So much polish, in fact, that many of the hi-def screen shots (the game runs at 1080p) look eerily real--especially in the new cockpit view. For those who can't wait until next year, the best reason to buy this demo is the online competition. Up to 16 players can jockey for first place on in-game and Internet leaderboards. 

Enough jibber-jabber. I took a quick test drive with the new DualShock3 controller, and it works as well as one would expect. The gamepad feels well-weighted and gives a subtle bit of force feedback when sliding into tight turns.

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.

Logitech Driving Force GT game 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 to burn rubber with one. The red dial and buttons allow you to tweak and adjust car settings as you race--a handy feature for gearheads. More important, though, is how this $150 controller feels. Solid and easy to anchor to a table, it is rubbery in all the right places, and it pulls enough g's on turns to give a proper roadside experience.

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 recognition. Then, seconds later, the wheel sprung to life. The only things that remain invisible to the PC are the red dial and its control buttons. Maybe I'll test it on the fully free racing title that also released this week, TrackMania Nations Forever. (More on TrackMania on the next page.)


Next page: The Free Race
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