1 Rfactor 2 -
Oh, the UI. The new “Modern UI” (released years ago) is better than the old web-based monstrosity, but that’s like saying a root canal is better than a kick in the teeth. Menus are buried. Setting up a multiplayer race requires a computer science degree. And don’t get me started on the launcher’s existential dread.
iRacing this is not. Public lobbies are a ghost town. To enjoy rF2 online, you must join a league (like the fantastic RaceDepartment or SimRacing.GP communities). The matchmaking and ranking systems are practically non-existent.
It’s better than 2018. It’s not better than 2024 standards. Frame rates can tank on medium-tier hardware during rain. Crashes still happen. And if you forget to verify your Steam files after an update? Good luck.
And the ? Legendary. Out of the box, it’s raw, unfiltered, and brutally informative. You drive with your hands, not your eyes. The steering wheel becomes a seismograph for the track surface—every ripple, every bump, every subtle change in camber is transmitted directly to your fingertips. The “rF2 Moment”: You’re wrestling a vintage Lotus 49 around the Nordschleife. The rear steps out at Flugplatz. In any other sim, you’d spin. In rF2, you feel the exact moment the outside rear tire bites into the asphalt, catch the slide with a micro-correction, and survive. You weren't driving a car. You were negotiating with it. The Track Model: More Than Just a Ribbon of Asphalt Where other sims treat tracks as perfectly flat, laser-scanned sculptures, rF2 understands that real race tracks are alive . Studio 397’s track scanning process captures macro-geometry (kerbs, elevation) and micro-surface texture.
Oh, the UI. The new “Modern UI” (released years ago) is better than the old web-based monstrosity, but that’s like saying a root canal is better than a kick in the teeth. Menus are buried. Setting up a multiplayer race requires a computer science degree. And don’t get me started on the launcher’s existential dread.
iRacing this is not. Public lobbies are a ghost town. To enjoy rF2 online, you must join a league (like the fantastic RaceDepartment or SimRacing.GP communities). The matchmaking and ranking systems are practically non-existent.
It’s better than 2018. It’s not better than 2024 standards. Frame rates can tank on medium-tier hardware during rain. Crashes still happen. And if you forget to verify your Steam files after an update? Good luck.
And the ? Legendary. Out of the box, it’s raw, unfiltered, and brutally informative. You drive with your hands, not your eyes. The steering wheel becomes a seismograph for the track surface—every ripple, every bump, every subtle change in camber is transmitted directly to your fingertips. The “rF2 Moment”: You’re wrestling a vintage Lotus 49 around the Nordschleife. The rear steps out at Flugplatz. In any other sim, you’d spin. In rF2, you feel the exact moment the outside rear tire bites into the asphalt, catch the slide with a micro-correction, and survive. You weren't driving a car. You were negotiating with it. The Track Model: More Than Just a Ribbon of Asphalt Where other sims treat tracks as perfectly flat, laser-scanned sculptures, rF2 understands that real race tracks are alive . Studio 397’s track scanning process captures macro-geometry (kerbs, elevation) and micro-surface texture.