DRAG is easily one of the most impressive Early Access games from 2020 and they ended 2020 in style with a big upgrade to the game and it's looking great.
Since DRAG has a next generation 4CPT vehicle physics (4-way contact point traction technology), there's going to be plenty of tweaks over its Early Access stay. The latest update adds in limited-slip differentials to the front and rear axles as well as a center diff, plus they did a big balancing pass to the handling system.
I've put quite a few hours into it with all these changes, and it feels overall like a big improvement. There's less spinning-out and random slipping where it feels like you should have some grip. If you found it too difficult before, this is a good time to check it out again.
The controls for gamepads and keyboard were also adjusted as they "focused the damping and sensitivity more on the center", along with Steering Wheel force feedback being reworked but still very much a work in progress.
For a bit more fun they also added tire walls to the game, which you can smash through.
For drivers who like a little more customization, DRAG will also now let you switch up the colours of Vehicle 1 so you can make the game feel that little bit more personal. That might actually be my favourite feature, as silly as it is, having your personal colours on your car while racing around makes it feel that little bit sweeter.
More fixes also came along including:
- updated SDL2 for PS5 and Xbox Series X controller support
- fixed camera collisions in online qualifications
- fixed respawn orientation in hairpin track A-4
- lowered guardrail friction in Zone-B to make them less deadly
- increased guardrail friction on Demo track to avoid wall riding
- fixed shortcut on Demo track
They also updated the demo to include Special Event track 1 permanently so you have more content to try before you buy.
What else is planned? More tracks, a better online system with lobbies, split screen support for the online races, new vehicles, more languages, a photo mode, a track editor and they've been teasing a large open-world style area in their Discord. Safe to say 2021 is going to be a fun year to follow DRAG. You can find DRAG on Steam.
Never seen DRAG in action? Check out their original trailer:
Direct Link
Quoting: BogomipsI previously had a Saitek x52, which someone wrote a library / utility for Linux, so it worked great. But then I upgraded to the Warthog beast. I guess what it comes down to is people who write such things need hardware to test with.Quoting: slaapliedjeHa, you triple told him!
Let's not forget the lack of resource eating software that likes to sit in the background on Windows, a driver / software model that doesn't ask for a reboot every time, etc.
I had to uninstall and reinstall with several reboots in between, my Thurstmaster Warthog last night just so I could play some Elite: Dangerous in VR... I should try to tear apart their scripting engine and try to port it to Linux...
Hmm, when I posted it, the UI was unresponsive and nothing happened (or so I thought).
That is one of the most irritating pain for me, the lack of support for some peripherals. (Logitech if you can hear me…).
Mice are ok now with piper or solaar but my G13 is a pain in the ass even if now it is somewhat working (and I love it because it is an ortholinear keyboard).
Quoting: Mountain ManWill definitely give this a look. I love the graphics, but the driving physics in previous versions was terrible with the cars having no grip and bouncing out of control after hitting the slightest bump.Also, when a real car's tire goes off an edge or over a hole, the suspension drops that tire very rapidly! In the trailer posted here, the tire gradually drops down. Not sure if that is to be forgiving because it's a game or what. Compression, rebound, and gravity work much faster IRL.
Edit: The developers are getting there, but they still have some work to do. Cars seem to stick to the road a little better, so at least you can properly power slide, but they're still too light and prone to bouncing wildly out of control. They also have an absurdly wide turn radius making it nearly impossible to take tight corners without slowing to a crawl.
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