As a direct ancestor of iRacing, the ‘Grand Prix Legends engine’ had multiple stock car racing false starts, before eventually releasing as NASCAR Racing 4. The original NASCAR 3, cancelled and replaced by one that used NASCAR 2’s engine, is barely remembered.
Shortly after the release of Grand Prix Legends the sim racing community looked forward to another title that promised to offer a similar insight into historic racing. Trans-Am Racing ’68-’72 ultimately never released, a victim of a publishers shady dealings, but as a part of my research I uncovered a VHS of a never-released trailer for the game. Watch the trailer and read about what sim racing missed out on.
Reiza Studios sneakily released a final final hotfix for their final update for Automobilista on Tuesday. It covers all issues since the last final hotfix update.
I’m amusing myself with a joke about it, but frankly it’s awesome to see them still trying to perfect a title they’ve already moved focus away from.
– Added a hardcoded SteeringFFBMult value so a car will still have Force Feedback even if value is missing or zeroed in its physics file
– Fixed fanatec DD base features initialization in compatibility mode
– Fixed centering spring on game startup for Logitech wheels & small adjustments to rotation range method
– Fixed Fanatec wheel rumble being turned off in wrong way
– Donington: Switched off collision for pit building roof so Trucks won´t be stuck
– Snetterton: Fixed crash in AMS Dedi loading Snetterton 300; Fixed filters so track will be available for FTruck series; Small graphical and object updates
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