WRC 10 FIA World Rally Championship for PC is a racing game, and this one is the successor to WRC (World Rally Championship) 9, and, as usual, is a celebration of the 2021 season of the real life World Rally Championship. All twelve rounds have been digitised faithfully, and the season include four brand new courses (more about which below).
About the Game
As well as being a faithful representation of the 2021 rally racing seasons, this game is also a celebration of the fiftieth year of the...
WRC 10 FIA World Rally Championship for PC is a racing game, and this one is the successor to WRC (World Rally Championship) 9, and, as usual, is a celebration of the 2021 season of the real life World Rally Championship. All twelve rounds have been digitised faithfully, and the season include four brand new courses (more about which below).
About the Game
As well as being a faithful representation of the 2021 rally racing seasons, this game is also a celebration of the fiftieth year of the real life World Rally Championship. Of course – video games were little more than arcade games fifty years ago!
To mark the anniversary, the game’s developers have included a host of vintage cars ranging from long ago Group B to A-List contemporary beauties, all of which you will be itching to put through their paces: from the beautiful Alpine 110, to Group A’s Lancia Delta, the Citroen Zsara WRC, and Audi’s Quattro as well as up to 20 other unique models, several of which are new to the game, others made their appearance in earlier games.
A further homage to the anniversary date, Retrospective Mode will allow you to play though 19 historic courses each of which earned fame for key moments in the rally championship’s history.
In the game, you will manage your team and organise sponsorships just the real life characters must do during the real life championship. Tweak your teams and cars virtually and see what a difference you can make to the real life listings!
The game covers the full history of WRC highlights, from its humble beginnings in 1973 to up-to-date present day rallying.
The Nitty Gritty
In the game there are already more than fifty official teams, driving over realistically rendered courses. The whole offering provides detailed and lifelike environments to blast your car of choice through.
Vehicle handling has received an upgrade, especially as regards turbo features and the experience of braking: all is new and improved, with authentic motions and reactions, and highly satisfying driving experiences. Sound and visuals are improved too so not only will you feel as though you are really driving, but it will also look and sound like it too.
New to the game are carefully engineered weather physics for your drivers to contend with, with a sunny day providing a much more secure feeling ride than a stormy night.
Perhaps the best USP of the entire game though, is the feature which, unlike the last iteration of the game, lets you invent an entirely new team which can then be fully kitted out in the livery editor. Previous versions of the game would only let you play with real life teams as they appear on the roads.
Four New Courses To Try Out
New to this are the following game tracks:
Croatia Rally: hit the beautiful countryside of Croatia, blasting through leafy forests, roaring along smoothly tarmacked roads and enjoying battling more rugged dirt roads in the mountainous areas. This course provides a bit of something for everyone
Rally Estonia: throw up clouds of dust as you glide over the gravel roads, enjoy your reflection in the untroubled waters of the lake and take pains to avoid the people and places that line the road during race time
Ypres Rally: tranquil church spires, neatly patchworked farm fields and a general sense of Belgian tranquillity is just waiting for you to go along and disrupt it all
Rally de Catalunya: rugged mountain sides, surprising puddles waiting for you to tear through them, and hordes of spectators in unexpected nooks and crannies mark this Spanish course
WRC 10 FIA World Rally Championship for PC is available for purchase on Instant Gaming for a fraction of its retail price. You will receive an official key and be able to play the game in seconds. Play smart. Pay less.
Configurations
minimum*
OS: Windows 10
Processor: Intel Core i5-2300 or AMD FX-6300
Memory: 8 GB RAM
Graphics: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 650 Ti, 2 GB or AMD Radeon HD 7790, 2 GB
DirectX: Version 12
recommended*
OS: Windows 10
Processor: Intel Core i7-4790k or AMD Ryzen 5 2600
The game is graphically beautifully rendered...BUT! Its menu is difficult to navigate, and so is the game as such. Disappointing for me... But I believe that someone will definitely like her.
Good graphics
Difficult navigation in menu and game
2024-10-13T09:15:04-0400
best rally game and the graphics just woaaw
2024-09-07T21:02:16-0400
not optimal with controllers.
2024-07-28T19:58:30-0400
I like it, nice gameplay maybe a little dull with the handling with a steering wheel and the maps are well done, mqybe a little graphics improvement would be nice but overall a good game and nice exeperience.
Enjoyable 7/10
Great maps
Nice sounds
Good gameplay
Bad graphics
Not exeptional handling
2023-09-21T05:36:54-0400
2021 officially marks the 49th season of the World Rally Championship, making WRC 10’s 50th anniversary content… a fraction premature. Of course, after nearly two years of total turmoil it’s hard to blame anyone for wanting to celebrate their birthday early – the World Rally Championship included. To mark the moment, WRC 10 arrives armed with the most retro content to grace developer KT Racing’s series so far, with a new mode featuring cars and stages representing five decades of rally racing history. Combined with a deep career mode, the result is the spiciest and arguably the strongest official WRC game to date – though that’s a narrow victory, since it still hasn’t changed dramatically since the already very good WRC 8 and WRC 9, and it’s still making some of the same minor mistakes. That big 50th Anniversary mode is an important part of this year’s game, and it’s by far the biggest injection of historical content to the series since KT Racing started adding classic cars in WRC 8. With its own separate menu and period photography it does feel quite special at first, although there’s ultimately not really a great deal to it. They’re just a small collection of time trials with a little bit of text to explain the historical context of what you’re about to do. One significant issue that some may have with the Anniversary races is that the time requirements don’t scale with the global difficulty setting. Inexperienced racers can dial down the intensity of their career and quick race difficulty, but at the time of review, Anniversary mode cannot be changed. I thought I was cruising when I notched up the first two events on my first attempts, but that changed on the extremely tough third event (which is actually the fifth event, because confusingly the third and fourth event got skipped and remained unavailable). At least a couple of the time requirements I’ve subsequently encountered in this mode so far have been surprisingly stiff; certainly severe enough for less experienced racers to bounce right off this mode entirely. It seems strange for WRC 10 to cater for new and novice players with a variety of settings, driver aids, and tutorials, but opt for a hardcore, one-size-fits-all approach for the marquee Anniversary Mode. The good news for anyone stumped by the taxing time limits in Anniversary mode is that all of these cars – and the historical stages – can be used in identical fashion in quick play without any such pressure. WRC 10 allows us to put any car on any stage, historical or modern. The older historical stages are a fun addition because KT Racing has stripped out the contemporary advertising and safety features of the modern stages and replaced them with crowds of more period-authentic spectators, many of whom are poised dangerously close to the roadside. WRC 10’s old-school crowds aren’t anywhere near as thick as they were in the heyday of Group B bedlam but they definitely contain a few folks whose lifelong dream is to be killed by a rally car. Things obviously don’t get that grim, but the often-cramped crowds do make the historical stages a compelling challenge because just the tiniest touch to a stupid spectator will instantly respawn you on track with a stiff penalty.
2023-09-05T14:08:21-0400
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