Racing games these days are a dime a dozen. From consoles to tablets, there seems to be a new racing game being released every day. Some games get it right like Real Racing 3 or Need for Speed. Others set the benchmark for racing superiority like Forza or Grand Turismo. In the world of rally racers, besides the Dirt series, there are few games that truly capture the sport. WRC FIA World Rally Championships 3 seeks to add his name to that short resume. Does it succeed? Find out in our review!
TeamVVV writes: "Hot on the heels of our WRC 5 vs Sebastien Loeb Rally EVO comparison we thought we'd now pit the nine-time world rally champion endorsed game up against WRC 3.
What's particularly interesting here is that both games were developed by the same team – Milestone. Of course Milestone have since lost the WRC license to Kylotonn Games but don't rule them out bidding for it back in the future."
YouTube's member 'nfsking2000' has created an interesting tribute to rally games, in which we get to see the actual evolution of this genre from its MS-DOS days to its current-gen ones.
awesome!!! thanks for making me realize how disgusting this gen was as far as rally games go...
colin mcrae's
richard burns's
WRC's
topgear n64
are some of my favorites
WRC this gen stuck to its roots even though milestone took over they really improved and i cant wait for WRC4 on the VITA <---- now thats evolution : )
The last great rally game was Colin McRae Rally 2005. Everything after that, went towards the arcade racer market. Now that being said, due to where I live I have never been able to play the WRC series.
Richard Burns Rally is still considered the best rally game ever made by many hardcore rally game fans.
If Milestone could tune its car handling model and polish its visual output, the next version of WRC could help us forget that Codemasters has abandoned the world’s most mesmerizing motorsport.
A drift racing game..again soo 2002
Dirt is still the best in the genre.
I've always been a fan of offroad racers.
The problem with WRC are not the cars or it's sim-driving experience/damage but mainly the tracks.
Most are so badly designed with too many extreme turns one after another. I doubt even rally legend Sebastian Loeb could even drive properly in them.