Gran Turismo Review

As close to racing a modified Viper as I’ll ever get.

Racing reviews are some of the most difficult to write. It’s hard to make them

sound particularly different. I mean… whether the game is good or bad, you

select a car, you pick a track; then you drive the car around the track. Fast,

if possible.

Indeed, this is also the fundamental premise of Gran Turismo from Sony.

So lets take all that for granted, and focus on how Gran Turismo is different.

This may take a while, because there is more depth and detail to this racing

sim than anything I’ve seen before.

The first thing that caught my eye about Gran Turismo was totally unexpected.

My initial race was pretty underwhelming, as I drove my white Toyota Supra directly

into last place. Nice high framerate, good looking track, but nothing I hadn’t

seen in other modern racers like Need for

Speed 3
. Then the replay began, and for perhaps the first time in my life,

I didn’t skip it. It looked terrific (not my untalented driving, but the replay

itself). Thanks to detailed tracks, high-polygon cars, television-like camera

shots and pans, and a great light reflection trick, the replay looked… real.

I watched five other cars trounce me, and I was entranced. Every faulty driving

move I made was recorded perfectly. I could see all the cars react to acceleration

and braking. I could watch all four tires react independently as I cut a turn

too close and drove over the inside curb. I watched as centripetal force leaned

my car onto the outside suspension, my rear tires sliding out, sending the car

into an ungraceful spin as I tried frantically to countersteer. You can even

save these replays for later viewing and analysis. This was my first clue that

there was more to this game than just going around the track fast.

The sound was pretty good overall. The music consists of real cuts by real

bands, which is bold, but I didn’t really like them as they were of extremely

average quality. I much preferred to turn off the game music and put in my Doors

CD. The tire squeals were good, and the engine noises of each car sounded different,

which is very impressive for a reason you’re about to learn.

Have

you ever wanted to race that Honda Civic of yours? Ever pop the clutch on your

Toyota Celica and pretend you were Mario Anrdretti on that empty rural road?

If you’ve ever owned a Japanese car, chances are you can race a replica of it

in Gran Turismo. There is a whopping total of 166 different cars

from 11 different manufacturers, though European and American car companies

are under-represented. It also may take a few minutes for you American players

to find your car, as they all use the British model names.

Gran Turismo’s Arcade Mode is like all the other racing games you’ve played.

There are a bunch of cars to choose from, 3 skill levels, and 4 tracks on which to race. Race well and you can get lots of additional cars and 4 new tracks.

The 2 player mode runs split screen and the graphics stay nice and smooth.

It is the Simulation mode where you really discover the inner workings of

the game. You start with 10,000 ‘credits’ with which you can buy, say, a used

Honda Prelude. Race it in some ‘spot races’ (no special license required) and

you can win enough money to soup it up a bit. A new exhaust system, some softer

tires or a sports suspension.

The amazing part is that Gran Turismo takes all of this into account

and represents it in the performance of your car. This includes traction, weight,

load balance, gear ratios, downforce, and lots of other technical racing jargon.

For example, buy a racing suspension, and before each race you can modify the

car height (front and rear), spring rate, shock damping and camber angle. With

166 different cars and the ability to change everything from the spoiler to

the computer ROM that controls the engine, the possible combinations must run

to into the millions. Some of the better Formula 1 simulators have had this

kind of detail, but frankly, all those cars feel the same. When you can switch

from an Acura NSX to a Corvette, you’ll really notice the difference in the

weight, even if the performance is similar.

Of course, it will take a number of successful races before you can afford

either of those cars. And once you have a better car, its time to think about

getting a racing license. You can test into a ‘B’ class license, an ‘A’ class

and an international ‘A’ class. These are very difficult to get and the tests

are extremely hard. To pass them you will need to master weight transfer techniques,

cornering lines, hitting the apex, sliding, spin turns, braking drift, faint

motion and inertial drift. Then you must learn to use them on 11 different tracks.

All of these advanced driving techniques are covered in the extensive manual.

This may

get actually get a bit too detailed and complicated for many casual racers.

How many millimeters off the ground should I set my Nissan Fairlady? I didn’t

even know what a ‘camber angle’ was before I played Gran Turismo. I’m

still not sure what kind of stabilizers I should buy for my Viper: “Used skillfully,

they can reduce lateral load change without interfering with longitudinal load

transfer.” This is no Mario Kart.

Win some races, and your prize will include a new car. You can keep a garage

full of different cars and use them for different kinds of races, or certain

classes. One of the race series, for example, only allows front wheel drive

cars. The depth here is close to that of a RPG game, and of course you can save

your progress. You’ll need to as it will take many, many hours to afford that

500,000-credit race car of your dreams, not to mention qualifying for the license

to drive it. You can even save your favorite souped-up car on a memory card

and race it against your friend’s best cars.

Now obviously no game is all rainbows and lollipops. Once you fork over $50

for Gran Turismo (which I recommend), be prepared to spend some more

money. Saving your replays, custom cars, and progress in simulation mode can

use up whole memory cards and then some. Also, the incredible precision and

detailed simulation of the game makes it nearly impossible to drive with the

clunky digital controller pad. If you are ever going to stand a chance of getting

that ‘A’ class license, you will need an analog controller, preferably a steering

wheel and pedal rig.

However, I think the biggest flaw with Gran Turismo is that there is

no damage modeling. You can turn on the tire damage option, which includes regular

wear and tear, but that is it. There is no way to really crash your car. You

can hit that wall at 200 KPH and you won’t even get a scratch. It detracts from

the simulation feel of the game that you can take a turn too fast, smack into

the outside wall, and keep going, sometimes without even losing your position

in the pack. Something to fix for Gran Turismo 2?

Reviewer’s note: I have been

informed (6/26/98) that the reason you cannot damage the cars in Gran Turismo

is that the car manufacturers (Toyota, Nissan, Dodge, etc.) forbade it as a

condition of the licensing. Apparently they feel that consumer confidence might

be shaken if it were publicly known that your cars could be damaged if you crash

them. I hereby place a gypsy curse on all car manufacturers.

But this is the only flaw I could find to gripe about. The rest of the game

is just fantastic. There is simply no other racing game for the PSX with the

same graphic quality, depth, detail, and replay value. This is an absolute must-buy

for racing fans, and is still highly recommended for everyone else. Gran

Turismo
earns a rare ‘A’.

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