But in GT7 this process is now rendered hideously more expensive. For example, if you wanted to fast-track your way behind the wheel of a 2014 Lamborghini Veneno in GT Sport, you could pay US$5 and purchase this car direct from the PS Store. It’s a pretty gross approach considering all these cars are on the disc already and very much part of your initial purchase.Īt a fundamental level, though, these credit prices are simply out of control. Just want 1 million credits? Well, you’ll have to spend US$15 on packs of 750,000 credits and 250,000 credits, or US$20 on twice as many credits as you wanted. At a basic level, the limited set of tiers means there’ll regularly be no way for a player to purchase exactly the amount of credits they may want for a particular car. There are several glaring problems associated with this new approach to microtransactions. There are four tiers of credits available:
![gran turismo 7 ps4 review gran turismo 7 ps4 review](https://asset.vg247.com/gran-turismo-7-vg247-review.jpg)
This means instead of being able to purchase cars individually, which in GT Sport range in price between US$1 and US$5, players tempted to accelerate their GT7 car collections by using real money need to shell out for batches of in-game credits. Update, March 7, 2022: Since the publishing of Gran Turismo 7’s reviews Sony has flicked the switch on its microtransactions and the news is as we suspected – and, in some ways, much worse.Īs it appeared, GT7 is based on a direct cash-for-credits scheme (as opposed to GT Sport’s microtransaction functionality, which allowed players to purchase individual cars valued up to 2 million in-game credits with real money instead of in-game credits).
![gran turismo 7 ps4 review gran turismo 7 ps4 review](https://www.topgear.com/sites/default/files/2022/03/6_0.jpg)
Even neat ideas, like the huge range of official manufacturer paint colours we can use in the design booth, annoyingly come with a cost attached.
#GRAN TURISMO 7 PS4 REVIEW UPGRADE#
Payouts aren’t particularly extravagant and car upgrade costs can be surprisingly high for some items, like tyres that cost twice as much as an entire MX-5, or $100,000 nitrous systems no amount of boosted DVD players would ever pay for. But, I implore you to play a bit of Gran Turismo 7 with the DualSense, if only to see – and feel – one of the best examples to date of the controller’s features.You’ll definitely be able to win many more cars this way than you’d be able to afford to buy in your first week with GT7, that much is clear. The force feedback and torque options feel as if they’ve been given a complete overhaul, and everything reacts in a more natural, realistic way compared to Gran Turismo Sport. And the good news is that Gran Turismo 7 is – by far – the best Gran Turismo to play with a wheel.
![gran turismo 7 ps4 review gran turismo 7 ps4 review](https://gamernetwork.bbvms.com/mediaclip/4696852/pthumbnail/640/360.jpg)
I understand there will be many folks who won’t ever touch the DualSense with Gran Turismo 7, instead opting to use a racing wheel.
![gran turismo 7 ps4 review gran turismo 7 ps4 review](https://www.gamespot.com/a/uploads/scale_landscape/43/434805/3947556-untitled-1.jpg)
I won’t ever forget the first time I went over a rumble strip and felt it in my left hand as if I was driving a real car. Of course, the triggers are more effective than ever at conveying when your tires lock up or if you’re under/oversteering, but it’s the combination of the triggers and the haptic feedback that provides an unparalleled racing game + controller experience. Equally as impressive is Polyphony Digital’s use of the DualSense to mimic the sensations of a car better than any other controller in history.