Gran Turismo Sport - the Beta shows that this racer is better, and more complete than you think...
A cut-down version of Gran Turismo Sport has been made available as a Closed Beta. Available to a select group of gamers, it lets Sony test the game’s defining aspect – its online racing. Offering three race events at set times every day, it’s a taster of what the full game will bring when it launches at some point later this year. I’ve played the Beta extensively, and come away very pleasantly surprised at how it’s shaping up. Here’s what I learnt from my weekend with GT Sport...
It looks way, WAY better than it did when it was unveiled
GT Sport was first shown off a year ago, and it looked like a slightly shinier (but also less slick in terms of frame rate) version of Gran Turismo 6. But all that’s in the past. GT Sport is absolutely gorgeous. The game moves at 60fps unless you’ve got ten cars on the screen in which case it drops the occasional frame. Replays move at 30fps, which is fine, since they have extra effects on them to make them look gorgeous. While the trees can look a little flat, and in-car views a little sterile, the overall look is wonderful. The lighting, in particular, is a massive step forward, and the quality of the glare when you face the sun in cockpit view is just magnificent.
You can play with the d-pad for some GT nostalgia
When you start the game, you’re given a variety of control options, and some of them are retrotastic. If you remember the days of the original Gran Turismo on PSone, you’ll be pleased (or at least tickled) to see there’s an option for digital steering input via the d-pad. But that’s not all! Fans of Gran Turismo 3: A-Spec who lamented the DualShock 2’s lack of analogue triggers will likely have done their accelerating and braking via the right analog stick. That option’s available here too. But don’t worry, ‘normal’ controls with the left stick and triggers are the default.
The new sportsmanship stat is completely ignored by most people
There are two ranking systems in GT Sport – a driver rating and a sportsmanship rating. Everyone starts at E on the driver rating, and that improves as you play, remembering how much you stay on the road and where you finish in races. But the other stat is all about collisions with other cars. Even though the game ghosts out any drivers who fail to brake in normal places (ie. looking to shunt someone up the rear), it’s still totally possible to nudge someone off the track. The best way to do this is to cut across their front and divert them off course. I know this because it happened to me ALL THE DAMN TIME.
The game wants you to play, not wait
The ‘Sport’ mode is the only one available to play in the Beta, and it features three races: A, B and C, which each have a clearly visible set start time in real world timing. But you can’t just enter them; you need to qualify for them first, using the FIA’s usual 108% rule to make sure everyone on the grid is at least semi-competitive. You can set as many qualifying laps as you like before the race. You’ll get a countdown to matchmaking beginning, and you’re taken out of the game when that happens. You do need to remember to enter the race after qualifying though, it won’t enter you for anything unless you say so. After matchmaking, everyone is let loose from the pits onto the track for a warm-up, before the race proper begins. The upshot of all this is that you spend most of your time on the track, not in menus and lobbies. The progression of play works superbly.
Connection quality may be an issue
Having a super-fast connection (for the UK at least) doesn’t mean the races are flawless. Ping time is displayed in the top-right of the screen and varied for me between 20ms and 120ms. But the green bars were always completely full, suggesting my connection was more than adequate. Even so, there was quite a lot of lag from many of the other cars, as they seemed to crash off the track but then reappear back on it on the normal racing line. Some would jitter down the straight, too. If it gets really bad the game does appear to grey them out so they don’t smash you off the track, but it doesn’t look as solid as it probably should by now. We’ll see if this improves, or whether the full version lets you limit connection quality in the menus.
Having different cars in the same race is still the worst idea
What is it with racing sims and disparity? GT Sport’s Beta awards you new cars for completing challenges – for example a ‘marathon achievement’ for doing more than 26 miles in one day. The cars you win can be used in races, but that means there’s an obvious disparity on the track. It doesn’t matter how well you’re driving, someone with a faster engine will drive past you down the straight. It’s close enough to at least resemble a race, but it would be so nice to have a straight fight, just once. Hopefully the real game will have more single-car races to enjoy.
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It’s lost 99% of its pretentiousness
The soundtrack is nothing like a 1920s speakeasy, which is awesome. In fact, while not quite up to the raucous, bombastic Gran Turismo 3: A-Spec, the majority of in-game music is most definitely rock, evoking memories of the very first Gran Turismo on PSone. Post-race victory screens capture the romance of motorsport, with ultra-slow motion movement on a driver in a victory pose. It’s very clean, very assured, but definitely not soulless. And it doesn’t fawn over the cars, instead presenting them in supreme clarity and letting you do the drooling. It’s grown up from GT3, but isn’t a granddad like GT5. A logical progression from GT6, then.
Great track design isn’t dead after all
Besides a smattering of real-world courses including the ever-awesome Brands Hatch (in both its GP and Indy layouts) and Willow Springs, one course in the Beta really caught my eye. Dragon Trial is a phenomenal, fictional circuit set by the sea and taking in lush woodland and a small town area. Every single corner has something to offer in terms of challenge or just plain enjoyment. That sounds obvious, but you’d be surprised how many modern racing games neglect this fundamental aspect. Highlights include the chicane before the tunnel near the end of the lap, and the flat-out right hander that leads into a much tighter one, which then opens out gloriously over the crest of a hill. It’s utterly gorgeous to drive.
The game feels (mostly) finished already
This doesn’t feel like pre-release builds usually do. Everything has an air of quality and precision to it. The frame rate is superb, everything looks crisp and deliberate, the menus all flow nicely, and the visuals are finely tuned. The music and sounds effects are well balanced, and transitional screens are slick. Only the occasional online hiccup spoils the visage of completion. This one looks ready to hit the road. All we need now is a release date…
Justin was a GamesRadar staffer for 10 years but is now a freelancer, musician and videographer. He's big on retro, Sega and racing games (especially retro Sega racing games) and currently also writes for Play Magazine, Traxion.gg, PC Gamer and TopTenReviews, as well as running his own YouTube channel. Having learned to love all platforms equally after Sega left the hardware industry (sniff), his favourite games include Christmas NiGHTS into Dreams, Zelda BotW, Sea of Thieves, Sega Rally Championship and Treasure Island Dizzy.
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