

Becoming familiar with the ways cars handle is vital to your success, and WRC 10’s upgrades on the handling front are mostly smaller changes, making the cars feel that much more varied and forcing you to make more precise decisions regarding turning, accelerating, and what risks you’re willing to take. Every turn is a dangerous balance between drifting, stopping, or accelerating, and even straightaways aren’t always perfectly safe. The core of WRC lies in the gameplay, where tuning your car to match the track, terrain, and conditions ahead of you can not only make or break your ability to beat a record or win a race, but your ability to finish the track at all.

WRC 10 PS5 REVIEW UPGRADE
"While WRC 10 isn’t as comprehensively new as it is an incremental upgrade over last year’s game, it still offers the most fine-tuned package the series has seen and rivals some of the best licensed racing games on the market." Developer Kylotonn has done the tough deed of bringing the real-life WRC to your living room with steady upgrades over the past few installments since taking over the WRC franchise, and while WRC 10 isn’t as comprehensively new as it is an incremental upgrade over last year’s game, it still offers the most fine-tuned package the series has seen and rivals some of the best licensed racing games on the market. I love the idea that whether it’s on a true track or just along a path in a jungle, it fulfills that dream of long, dangerous drives where you need to have mastered the craft to finish, much less succeed. For as many real-life racing leagues or driving games that exist, the WRC is certainly one of the most interesting, unique ways to get behind the wheel. There’s something incredibly special about the World Rally Championship.
