ACC Nordschleife Hands-on: The Best Green Hell In Sim Racing?


The wait is finally over: What seemed impossible is now reality, the Nürburgring-Nordschleife is in Assetto Corsa Competizione. We tried a preview version of the track - here are our hands-on impressions.

It used to be a meme. It used to be shot down for licensing reasons. It used to be a pipe dream for sim racers - the Nürburgring-Nordschleife in Assetto Corsa Competizione. As no SRO-sanctioned event ran at the track, licensing would not allow the legendary Green Hell to appear in ACC - until the announcement that the Nürburgring 24 Hours would be part of the IGTC calendar from 2024 onwards.

Sim racers around the world could not type the old question everywhere again fast enough - could it stil happen? Now that ACC is most likely in the final part of its life cycle? Rumors kept swirling around, until developer Kunos Simulazioni finally announced in November that the track would actually come to the sim.

Since then, its supposed April 1 release date confirmed in mid-March seemed like a very early April Fool's joke, but here we are - the Nordschleife makes its debut, and we have gotten to try a preview version. Here are some of the things we noticed.


ACC Nordschleife Layout​

As expected, the Nordschleife for Assetto Corsa Competizione adds one new track layout to the sim, namely the one used in the 24-hour race every year. While at the real track, the Nordschleife itself only has one configuration that can be run either with or without the GP loop, the latter has multiple configurations available.

Compared to the Nürburgring version that comes with ACC by default, the GP loop in the 24-hour version skips the Mercedes Arena. The usual first sector is bypassed by a tight right-left chicane. Other than that, the layout remains intact, although the anti-cut measures like tire stacks and kerbs in the Veedol-Schikane - so right before turning onto the Nordschleife - are slightly different.

ACC-Nordschleife-Entry.jpg

Possibly the most-anticipated left turn in sim racing history.

Warm-up Lap Shortcut​

Of course, running a full lap on the Nordschleife before starting a timed lap is a bit excessive. In the real 24-hour race (and NLS races, too), it is possible to use the final turn of the GP loop instead of turning onto the Nordschleife, allowing drivers to use the GP loop as a warm-up area of sorts.

This also works in ACC, and even the AI use it - which is rarely the case in other titles. In RaceRoom, this works as well, while the shortcut does not work in Automobilista 2, for instance. Not having to run the extra long lap is certainly a nice feature.

On-point Atmosphere​

Having modeled The Ring to represent the 24 Hours, getting the atmosphere right was an important task for Kunos. And it is safe to say that they nailed it.

The lighting around the track superb, with rays of sun breaking through the thick forests on occasion, parts of the track already being much darker than those that are still soaked in the light of the setting sun. Where the track really shines is, ironically, at night.

It almost feels like there are two worlds at the Nürburgring at night. For one, there is the GP loop, which is well lit in most places, very wide and relatively modern. But then, you turn onto the Nordschleife and enter an entirely different environment in the span of just a few meters.

ACC-Nordschleife-Night-Lights.jpg

The crowds add a lot of atmosphere at night, just like at the real 24 Hours.

Crowds Party Throughout The Night​

Coming up to Sabine-Schmitz-Kurve, you can already see the trees being lit up red, then blue, then green. Turn into the left-hander, and you see that the camp at the top of the hill is in full-on party mode - laser show and camp fire included.

This is the case for most spectator areas surrounding the track, emulating the party atmosphere of the real 24 Hours very well. In between, however, you race through the pitch-black night engulfing the Eifel mountains. Visually, the ACC Nordschleife is an absolute treat and arguably the prettiest rendition in sim racing currently.

Add in the rain that is so typical for the region and the ACC Nordschleife becomes a different beast altogether. With compromised visibility, but added reflections on the wet asphalt, it is even easier to see why the track is considered the most challenging circuit in the world.

ACC-Nordschleife-Night-Rain.jpg


Weather​

Unfortunately, one trademark element of the Nürburgring that the Nordschleife in Assetto Corsa Competizione does not capture as lifelike as the rest is the weather. Due to its location and its length, the track frequently sees parts of the circuit being hit by downpours while the sun is still shining at others at the same time.

The weather system in ACC does not have this capability. Instead, every part of the track is affected at the same time once rain starts falling. Of course, this makes the weather a bit more predictable over the course of a lap, but it also takes away some of the challenge the Green Hell is famous for.

ACC Nordschleife Performance​

With such a long track, you might wonder about its performance - and rightfully so, considering that ACC is not the most hardware-friendly title out there. However, during our tests on an RTX 4080 GPU and an i7 13700K processor combo, the framerate stayed comfortably above 60 fps at all times, even in the rain and at night - and without DLSS, too, all at a resolution of 3440x1440.

This was with 49 AI cars on track, the maximum for offline racing. The most taxing part of the track in this case was the start/finish straight with the pit lane. Once that has been left behind, however, the performance was much better.

In VR, a similar experience greeted us. While ACC is generally not easy to run smoothly in VR, you are good once you dialed everything in - even at the Green Hell. We were pleasantly surprised by the VR performance, which is about the same as the GP Loop-only version of the Nürburgring.

How do ACC Cars handle the Nordschleife?​

One of the concerns raised by sim racers was the kerb behavior of ACC in regards to the Nordschleife. Kerbs can be deadly on some of the other tracks, after all, and the Green Hell requires full committment over some of them to be quick.

Luckily, this is not a problem. Part of the update deployed alongside the Nordschleife also adjusted the cars' dampers, and as a result, they behave like you would expect them to if you are used to running the circuit in other titles.

ACC-Nordschleife-Karussell.jpg


The generally bumpy nature of the ACC Nordschleife is noticable, however, and some cars handle them much better than others. Running the 'aggressive' preset setup on the Porsche 911 GT3 R (992), for instance, is a much more nervous experience than in a Ferrari 296 GT3. The Italian mid-engine racer that won the 2023 24 Hours is much more planted and pleasant to drive, even through the Caracciola-Karussell.

Similarly, the BMW M4 GT3 is as friendly a car to drive as ever. Most likely, the Porsche can be perfectly fine as well, although that will possibly require a bit of setup work. Either way, the ACC Nordschleife should be a track that will allow the different cars' characteristics to shine in different places. Combined with the challenging layout, this should make for exciting racing over the course of the 25.378-kilometer lap.

To go back to the question in this article's headline: Is it the best Green Hell in sim racing? It has a great case to make this claim. What is easy to see, though, is that it is for sure best-looking rendition of the Nürburgring-Nordschleife out there. At least in the author's opinion.

Are you going to get the ACC Nordschleife? If you do, let us know your first impressions on Twitter @OverTake_gg or in the comments below!
About author
Yannik Haustein
Lifelong motorsport enthusiast and sim racing aficionado, walking racing history encyclopedia.

Sim racing editor, streamer and one half of the SimRacing Buddies podcast (warning, German!).

Heel & Toe Gang 4 life :D

Comments

Premium
"With such a long track, you might wonder about its performance - and rightfully so, considering that ACC is not the most hardware-friendly title out there. However, during our tests on an RTX 4080 GPU and an i7 13700K processor combo, the framerate stayed comfortably above 60 fps at all times, even in the rain and at night - and without DLSS, too."

It might be worth adding what resolution you are running to this bit?
 
Last edited:
Looking forward to giving this a go if I can find some free evening time this week. I'm craving a terrifying 992 German road trip.
 
Premium
I am running 5760x1080 (x3 27in 1080 curve monitors) 6950xt OC, 32gb 3400 ram, 5700x OC 4.8ghz with everything on high including 125% upscale resolution I was getting above 75 pretty steady. With TrackIR and simhub running. Once ACC Results and RaceElement are updated for the DLC I'll run them
 
Last edited:
Just did a few laps, short story: worth every penny.
Longer story: It might be different for many, but for me, every new ACC track is like rediscovering the track. For this DD and VR driver, the feeling of immersion on any ACC track is off the chart. Sure, I can also enjoy those tracks in other SIM, but no other delivers that "atmosphere" of being there as ACC does.
I will (most probably) never drive a GT at the Nordschleife IRL, but after a few laps today, I feel like I have been the closest to get what it must feel like.
To me ACC "feels" right, more so than any other of the title I also enjoy.
So worth the wait? Absolutely!
This is a hell of a track IRL, thank you Kunos for delivering to us this exceptionally good SIM rendition for us all to enjoy. :)
 
Last edited:
Just did a few laps, short story: worth every penny.
Longer story: It might be different for many, but for me, every new ACC track is like rediscovering the track. For this DD and VR driver, the feeling of immersion on any ACC track is off the chart. Sure, I can also enjoy those tracks in other SIM, but no other delivers that "atmosphere" of being there as ACC does.
I will (most probably) never drive a GT at the Nordschleife IRL, but after a few laps today, I feel like I have been the closest to get what it must feel like.
To me ACC "feels" right, more so than any other of the title as also enjoy.
So worth the wait? Absolutely!
This is a hell of a track IRL, thank you Kunos for delivering to us this exceptionally good SIM rendition for us all to enjoy. :)
That's fantastic to read! Took me ages to tweak ACC to my liking where visual fidelity and performance in VR was concerned, but once I did it sank its teeth into me and is in regular rotation.

One thing that ACC has nailed is that immersion factor, at least in VR. The cockpit feels real in a way most sims aside from maybe AMS2 do not achieve, whether it's just in the fidelity and details, or the interactable MFDs and displays which go a long way in selling the experience. Just wish they could implement "real" VR mirrors like AMS2 and AC CSP have, but that's nitpicking. Very much looking forward to soaking up some ACC Nords behind an HMD.
 
"With such a long track, you might wonder about its performance - and rightfully so, considering that ACC is not the most hardware-friendly title out there. However, during our tests on an RTX 4080 GPU and an i7 13700K processor combo, the framerate stayed comfortably above 60 fps at all times, even in the rain and at night - and without DLSS, too."

It might be worth adding what resolution you are running to this bit?
he did "and without DLSS, too, all at a resolution of 3440x1440."
 
ACC usually offers its DLC for a competitive price, but not this time IMO.
At €12.99 it's €4 more expensive than the Nürburgring Pack in AMS 2, which actually deserves to be named a "pack" - considering it offers not only multiple current versions of the track, but historical ones as well (including the Südschleife).
Raceroom's combined price equals that of ACC, but the total number of track variations available is nine (five for the Ring, four for the Nordschleife).
 
Staff
Premium
ACC usually offers its DLC for a competitive price, but not this time IMO.
At €12.99 it's €4 more expensive than the Nürburgring Pack in AMS 2, which actually deserves to be named a "pack" - considering it offers not only multiple current versions of the track, but historical ones as well (including the Südschleife).
Raceroom's combined price equals that of ACC, but the total number of track variations available is nine (five for the Ring, four for the Nordschleife).
While I understand where you are coming from regarding the "pack", I think it is important to also see the actual costs.

AMS2 is the Nordschleife from pCARS right? So no actual laserscanning cost etc. as it is ported into AMS2, without the need to change something as its the same engine, and then refurbished. (that is ofc not the case for layouts that have not been in pCARS, so yes Reiza still added a ton).

RaceRooms "scan" of the Nordschleife is older and less accurate (you can basically see it as packages that can be bought, like a "basic" scan, "premium" & "pro" etc.) and was also done during a different time in terms of pricing.

ACC bought that scan/ordered that scan in 2023, so higher prices for that work (the scanning etc.) than the competitors who did it in previous years.
 
I don't know if it's just my VR setup, but the complete flashing / strobing within the headset when loading into a track (which is normally tolerable as ACC loads extremely quickly) is much less tolerable due to the longer load time for Nords. Aside from ACC's usual VR bugs of some lighting differences between eyes, it otherwise performed absolutely fine on my i7 11700 & RTX 3090 & Reverb G2.

This track caught me out in a few places due to sections just being a little different from what I'm used to in other titles. Once onto the Nords section itself, the first set of corners (Hatzenbach) are considerably sharper than I've ever seen, and the lead-up to the right hander before the big "straight" (just before Bergwerk) seemed considerably shorter too. They're only slight differences and that's not a complaint, but took a moment's relearning.

I actually really like all the "set dressing" on the sides of the tracks - all the tents and people make this Nordschleife feel very unique and alive, bringing it to a new level of realism and immersion and a great advert for the real life event. People who were just slagging of ACC for offering Nords as they already have it in a dozen other sims should be eating their words by now.

If it's truly the most up-to-date scan / version of the track then £9.99 for me is awesome value, well worth the price of admission, and will keep me coming back to ACC (not that I needed further incentive).
 
Last edited:
First impression is quite good. Nice to see the "Kurzanbindung" is integrated and you can run a fast lap after the gp layout.
Ai seems to have some trouble to handle the track though. Many yellow phases and some crazy crashes :). But the Nords is really good.
 
"In VR, a similar experience greeted us. While ACC is generally not easy to run smoothly in VR, you are good once you dialed everything in - even at the Green Hell. We were pleasantly surprised by the VR performance, which is about the same as the GP Loop-only version of the Nürburgring."

1 april joke?
 
Last edited:
Just did a few laps, short story: worth every penny.
Longer story: It might be different for many, but for me, every new ACC track is like rediscovering the track. For this DD and VR driver, the feeling of immersion on any ACC track is off the chart. Sure, I can also enjoy those tracks in other SIM, but no other delivers that "atmosphere" of being there as ACC does.
I will (most probably) never drive a GT at the Nordschleife IRL, but after a few laps today, I feel like I have been the closest to get what it must feel like.
To me ACC "feels" right, more so than any other of the title I also enjoy.
So worth the wait? Absolutely!
This is a hell of a track IRL, thank you Kunos for delivering to us this exceptionally good SIM rendition for us all to enjoy. :)

Oh yeah, I practiced yesterday in Assetto Corsa and thanks to that I've been able to navigate the circuit decently enough today in ACC. And Assetto Corsa is great for its time and with all the mods looks as good as anything, but when it comes to sound and feel, as soon I hit the track in ACC, it was like a new dimension opened up. ACC feels lively and violent (if that is an appropriate word) to me like no other game. The first couple of laps have been just about overwhelming but now it's time to try and make that experience into one as smooth as possible because as exciting as any touch of a high kerb or slide around a corner is, it's just throwing tenths out of the window. But there's a lot of feedback to work with.
 
I don't know if it's just my VR setup
I do not know either, but all I can say is that I do not have the issue on my VR setup.

ACC usually offers its DLC for a competitive price, but not this time IMO
You are of course entitled to your opinion and I respect it. In my view, in light of the instant success, in regards to how many people, all time peak, jump almost instantly on the opportunity to grabbed this DLC, it might have been too cheap. their was a high demand for that track in ACC, I feel Kunos was very reasonable in its pricing, in the circumstances.
As to compare to another SIM pricing, in this case AMS2, I see it as apple and oranges, even if it is the same track. I bought the AMS2 DLC (on sale) and I appreciate it for what it is.
The ACC version, is for me, and many others, on an all different level.
 
Last edited:

Latest News

Article information

Author
Yannik Haustein
Article read time
6 min read
Views
8,682
Comments
43
Last update

What's needed for simracing in 2024?

  • More games, period

  • Better graphics/visuals

  • Advanced physics and handling

  • More cars and tracks

  • AI improvements

  • AI engineering

  • Cross-platform play

  • New game Modes

  • Other, post your idea


Results are only viewable after voting.
Back
Top