2023 racing video game
2023 video game
EA Sports WRC , also known as EA WRC or simply WRC , is a racing video game developed by Codemasters and published by EA Sports . It holds the official licence (acquired by Codemasters in 2020) of the World Rally Championship and is powered by Unreal Engine 4 . It is the first Codemasters rally game to have the official WRC licence since Colin McRae Rally 3 in 2002. The game was released for Windows , PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X/S on 3 November 2023. In 2024, 2 paid DLCs have been released for the game.
Gameplay
EA Sports WRC features 78 rally cars.[ 1] 10 Groups Rally cars are from the World Rally Championship , including three Rally1 vehicles such as the Puma of M-Sport , the i20 N of Hyundai and the GR Yaris of Toyota and seven other cars from the support categories — the World Rally Championship-2 and the Junior World Rally Championship , including Ford Fiesta Rally3 — as well as 68 classic rally cars.[ 2] The other rally cars include Citroën Xsara WRC , Mini John Cooper Works WRC , Ford Fiesta Rally4 and Colin McRae R4, which was previously featured in DiRT 3 .[ 3] Car Builder , which is similar to My Team of the F1 series, allows players to create and customise their own rally cars.[ 4] The game includes over 200 competition stages across 18 WRC rallies .[ 5] Multiplayer mode is available for up to 32 cross-platform players.[ 6] Virtual reality mode is planned to be implemented in the future.[ 7]
Development and release
The game was revealed on 5 September 2023.[ 8] It was initially built as a sequel to Dirt Rally 2.0 .[ 9] Codemasters , the developer of the F1 series, started development of a WRC video game after they regaining the licence in 2020.[ 10] The last game by Codemasters with WRC licence was Colin McRae Rally 3 released in 2002, featuring the 2002 season .[ 11] EA Sports published the game after Codemasters was acquired by Electronic Arts in 2021.[ 12] The game is powered by Unreal Engine 4 , replacing Ego , which Codemasters had been using for its Dirt series since 2009's Colin McRae: Dirt 2 .[ 13] The game was available for Windows , PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X/S on 3 November 2023.[ 14] It featured three covers, featuring the Ford Puma Rally1 on PC, Hyundai i20 N Rally1 on Xbox and Toyota GR Yaris Rally1 on PS5.[ 15]
A major expansion entitled EA Sports WRC 24 , also known as EA WRC 24 or simply WRC 24 , was launched as downloadable content on 8 October 2024.[ 16] The expansion featured the official 2024 season cars and two additional locations, Rally Latvia and Rally Poland .[ 17]
Reception
Reception
Aggregate score Aggregator Score Metacritic (PC) 80/100 (PS5) 77/100 (XSXS) 76/100
EA Sports WRC received "generally favorable reviews", according to review aggregator Metacritic .[ 22] Reviewers praised the handling model, the extensive stage length and the car builder. Criticism mainly stemmed from frame-rate issues, especially on the Windows version.
References
^ Wales, Matt (5 September 2023). "Codemasters' EA Sports WRC gets November release date and first trailer" . Eurogamer . Retrieved 10 September 2023 .
^ Barry, Luke (5 September 2023). "EA Sports WRC – What you need to know" . dirtfish.com . Retrieved 5 September 2023 .
^ Bigg, Martin (9 September 2023). "EA Sports WRC: 5 New Cars Confirmed" . racinggames.gg . Retrieved 10 September 2023 .
^ Howson, George (6 September 2023). "EA Sports WRC 23 Car Builder: Everything you need to know" . racinggames.gg . Retrieved 10 September 2023 .
^ Croft, Liam (5 September 2023). "EA Sports WRC Takes Rallying 'Next-Gen' on PS5 This November" . Push Square . Retrieved 5 September 2023 .
^ Yang, George (6 September 2023). "EA Sports WRC Is The Apparent Successor To The Dirt Racing Series" . GameSpot . Retrieved 10 September 2023 .
^ Erl, Josef (7 September 2023). "EA Sports announces virtual reality mode for racing sim WRC" . mixed-news.com . Retrieved 10 September 2023 .
^ Silva, João (4 September 2023). "EA will reveal its very first official WRC game tomorrow" . kitguru.net . Retrieved 5 September 2023 .
^ Ismail, Adam (1 September 2023). "EA Sports WRC Rally Game Is Finally Coming as Sequel to Dirt Rally 2.0" . thedrive.com . Retrieved 10 September 2023 .
^ Purslow, Matt (1 June 2020). "Codemasters Regains WRC License After 18 Years" . IGN . Retrieved 5 September 2023 .
^ Reilly, Luke (5 September 2023). "EA Sports WRC Announced, Arrives November" . IGN . Retrieved 10 September 2023 .
^ Batchelor, James (13 January 2021). "Take-Two withdraws bid for Codemasters following EA offer of $1.2bn" . GamesIndustry.biz . Retrieved 13 January 2021 .
^ Harrison-Lord, Thomas (5 September 2023). "EA SPORTS WRC is a radical new official game, launches November" . Autosport . Retrieved 5 September 2023 .
^ Sirio, Paolo (4 September 2023). "EA Sports WRC is releasing in November 2023, features new engine and cross-play" . videogames.si.com . Retrieved 5 September 2023 .
^ Harrison-Lord, Thomas (4 September 2023). "This is EA SPORTS WRC's cover" . traxion.gg . Retrieved 10 September 2023 .
^ Harrison-Lord, Thomas (18 September 2024). "EA Sports WRC's 2024 DLC expansion: all you need to know" . traxion.gg . Retrieved 30 September 2024 .
^ Hirons, Ryan (27 September 2024). "Here's How Much EA Sport WRC's 24 Expansion Will Cost" . carthrottle.com . Retrieved 30 September 2024 .
^ Wells, Cory (2 November 2023). "Review: EA SPORTS WRC" . Hardcore Gamer . Retrieved 5 November 2023 .
^ Ole Peek, Jan (30 October 2023). "EA Sports WRC review: An adrenaline-filled thrill ride" . Shacknews . Retrieved 5 November 2023 .
^ Warren, Mark (8 November 2023). "EA Sports WRC review: Fast, flowing rally fun" . VG247 .
^ Wise, Josh (7 November 2023). "EA Sports WRC review - a bracing and richly textured celebration of rally" . Eurogamer .
^ "EA Sports WRC PC" . Metacritic . CBS Interactive . Retrieved 5 November 2023 .
External links