If we would have liked for the last dance of the KT Racing-WRC collaboration real novelties on the Career mode and a little more fantasy on the classic game modes or the dressing, WRC Generations does the job. First in the modeling of his specials, then in handling his cars according to the surfaces and the conditions. In line with a successful anniversary episode, the ultimate title succeeds, without drastically upsetting its formula, in being a lasting opus and with the best lifespan of the saga. More than 150 stages in 22 countries, more than 80 racing cars with the addition of hybrid engines for the WRC, daily and weekly multi-league and club modes, the objective has been achieved by Kylotonn Racing: the title is immortal.
When you get into the guts of it, WRC Generations is by no means a drastic shake-up on its quality predecessors, even if there have been some small but welcome improvements to the career mode and customisation tools that have spiked my enthusiasm. It does, however, deserve credit for both the very respectable range of relevant rally cars it features, as well as its absolute mountain of rally locations. With almost every country to host the WRC over the last decade represented, WRC Generations may be KT Racing’s last WRC game, but there’s nothing least about it. The kitchen sink philosophy has resulted in a fantastic and uncommonly generous package for gravel groupies, asphalt addicts, and mud-slinging maniacs alike.
Deserves a much higher score than its current average of 70.
This game is fantastic and is way better than EA Sports WRC.
I've played all rally games and this one is easily my favorite one.
A MUST BUY!! I’ve been playing the WRC games made by Kylotonn since WRC 9. I’m also an avid Dirt Rally 2.0 player. I enjoy all of them, however, WRC Generations really hits the mark. The physics provide excellent feel of the surface you’re driving on and driving flat out is exhilarating - feels like nothing I’ve experience in any previous rally game. In previous titles, the physics felt detached, but in Generations you can feel the weight of the car truly shifting when you drift through a corner. In addition, the copious amount of rallies and stages to drive will keep me occupied for years to come. I’ve never actually driven a rally car, but WRC Generations provides me with a detailed sensation that makes me think “Wow so that’s what it must feel like driving through Sweden flat out, with one mistake easily taking you out of the rally.” It’s an magnificent send off by Kylotonn and I can see myself continually returning to the game for years to come.
WRC Generations is unfortunately a game that leaves a lot to be desired, and in many ways, this will disappoint quite a lot of fans of the franchise out there.
While it does come with intriguing improvements, such as the addition of hybrid cars, it fails to impress in the areas that you’d expect it to shine, such as the graphics. The DualSense integration feels nice, but this should no longer be something to praise a game for given it’s already 2022 and the PlayStation 5 has been around for a while. Should you buy WRC Generations? This depends on your expectations. If you’re a WRC fan like I am, you’ll probably end up having some fun with it, but otherwise, you’ll notice every little shortcoming from the moment you fire it up the first time.
In the seven years that KT Racing has been at the helm of development, we certainly haven't seen any radical changes or major improvements. Even so, in those years the series has had some of its most interesting moments, which are now offered all together in one package.
Whilst the presentation is stale, the driving of WRC Generations remains as engaging as ever. The new hybrid engines gave me something else to consider whilst adhering to the pace notes but the handling remained steady and reliable. The diverse locations provide a showcase or rallies present and past and, whilst the historical content has been featured before, it's now under one roof. I do wish they pushed the boat out for their final outing with the license but what's here is a solid product.
WRC Generations is a good rally game. A great one, even. But a lack of innovation and genuinely new content makes it the least essential entry in the series for some time. If you’re an ardent rally fan, by all means pick it up; you won’t be disappointed. At least not too much, anyway. But those with only a casual interest in the sport might want to stick with WRC 10 until this last official WRC effort from KT Racing goes on sale.
WRC Generations should be the ultimate final installment in the series, but only half succeeds. There is absolutely no shortage of content with plenty of cars and tracks, giving you hours of gameplay. At the same time, it is lacking in innovation and improvement, including relatively mediocre physics. If you already have the previous part, this is not worth it. If you are new, then thankfully WRC Generations has plenty to offer despite some shortcomings.
Salut. Oubliez les manettes et jouez y sur PC ! WRC générations demande de bien régler le ffb in game et sur le volant mais c'est une réussite totale . Il est nettement plus beau que le dernier EA wrc et plus fluide aussi , le pilotage est bien plus **** quand on met tout en simulation et les spéciale sont incroyablements bien construites, variées et corsée . Le jeu offre plus de détails dans la carrière simulation comme par exemple la gestion du personnel , du moral , la rd, le budget . En Jeu les spéciales offres des conditions météo changeantes en temps réel et ça cnditonnera vos choix de pneus hyper importants mais aussi le choix du météorologue de votre équipe !
Pour le reste , ce jeu est très complet , des spéciales très longues parfois (26 kms) , un pilotage qui varie beaucoup en fonction des types de voitures , des pneus et du revêtement (mention spéciale pour la physique sur neige , étant savoyard j'ai jamais vu mieux même sur DR 2.0 ou RBR) . Seul défaut notable , trop peu de réglages possibles pour le son et le mixage problématique entre copilote, ambiance et moteur sur certains véhicules .
Bref à ce prix là , foncez , ce jeu est autrement plus immersif et intéressant en terme de pilotage , de challenge et de réalisation que le tout dernier EA wrc (si vous êtes un ferru ) par contre si vous êtes un joueur cusual , tranquille , passez votre chemin .
Good-
Nice graphics and environments; Solid racing.
Bad-
Not quite enough variety; Stability issues; Mostly incremental improvements.
Thoughts-
For the most part, WRC Generations seems to round out the ups and downs of the previous few games with an arguably ideal combination of what worked best in recent installments. While I wish it went further than surface level with its upgrades, it has by no means phoned in this entry. Its gameplay is just deep enough for big-time enthusiasts to justify spending dozens of hours in, while its learning curve is just shallow enough for more casual or arcade style racing fans to get plenty of enjoyment out of it too. While it does ultimately pay the price of probably not wow-ing most people in either camp, it does handle the task of maximizing the knowledge the developer has clearly gained from the past few games while minimizing the price paid for the few wrinkles they were never quite able to totally iron out. Had the stability and variety been stepped up just a bit more, it would be a stronger recommendation, but as it is, I certainly wouldn’t ward you off if WRC Generations is something that you’re interested in. If you’re familiar with the series and generally know what to expect, then this is arguably the apex of the series up to this point but even if you’re new to the series, I still think there’s plenty of reason to give it a shot with some moderated expectations.
The developers called this game WRC Generations, and it doesn't even feature the second generation Subaru Impreza. Are you freaking kidding me? The developers were too cheap to license the car. The windshield wipers animations are nice, although the rain looks like a joke. Car physics are good for the most part, but the handbrake is flawed. Sometimes the car feels like a hovercraft around corners. Customization is good and so are the tracks. The graphics are impressive for a $40 game.
There is online multiplayer and local split screen. I personally didn't have any issues online. It works very well. It's always funny watching players lose control and flip over. The game is currently $30 and I recommend at the price or less.
Reason i love previous 2 WRC games is because of their DualSense support. The vibration effect was so good that you can literally feel the surface under the car in your palms but in generations the vibration doesn’t even work. It set to zero by default in the settings and if you try to change that the game crashes. Another issue is with the lack of water reflections on puddle and too much reflective shimmer on wet surfaces which is horrendous to look at. It’s been more than 10 days yet there is no update to fix these issues.
Summary Rise to all the challenges of the most comprehensive, realistic and demanding rally simulation ever developed. Dive into the heart of the action and drive the cars from the 2022 WRC championship, including the new hybrid models.