Must-Have Rally Game Hardware for EA Sports WRC

Rally game hardware.jpg
EA Sports WRC is just a few weeks away, so it is time to prepare. Here is some sim racing hardware to enhance your rally game experience.

Image credit: EA Sports

For many, sim racing is all about jumping behind the wheel of a race car and completing laps of a famous track whilst going wheel to wheel. But with EA Sports WRC, the next great rally game on its way, that vision will surely change in the next few weeks.

In fact, sim rallying is a totally different beast to sim racing. Sure, both disciplines allow players to jump behind the wheel of a virtual car and simulate the experience. But one is all about repetition, the other focuses on tackling an almost unknown section of track, adjusting to differing conditions.


As a result, virtual rallying requires a very different rig setup to track driving. With EA Sports WRC just a few weeks from release, it’s time to prepare one’s rig for the many hours they are about to spend going sideways on dirt. Here are some hardware tips to adjusting your rig for rally games.

Round Wheels for Rally Games​

Due to the GT3 and open wheeler focus, many a modern sim racer owns nothing more than a square formula-style rim, be it Thrustmaster’s Ferrari-branded replicas, Fanatec’s collection of F1 and GT models or even third-party Logitech customisations. Of course, this is far from a bad thing, as every racer has their personal preference.

However, this is not the setup one should be running in a rally title. When it comes to not only enjoying EA Sports WRC but also surviving a stage with one’s wrists intact, the best idea is to get a round steering wheel.

Obviously, no rally car in the history of the sport features a rectangular wheel. The old-school design also helps mid-stage. Navigating hairpins often requires changing one’s hand position on the wheel. Turning and shifting gear also means holding the wheel in different places is beneficial. These are things that aren’t possible with formula rims.


But it is not just for the practicality of counter steer that one should not rally with a formula wheel. With stages sometimes becoming somewhat frantic, a wheel can easily flip from one end of the lock to the other. If this happens with a round wheel, it is easy to grab hold of at any point in the rotation range to get back on track. Try to catch a formula wheel that is flailing about during a spin and you will need a lot of luck to not break something painful.

Each wheel manufacturer has its own list of round wheels. Moza has a trio of options, compatible with all of its bases. Fanatec has a pair of official WRC rims. Thrustmaster features a mix of round wheel representations, most of which come as standard with its selection of bases. Finally, Logitech’s models feature a standard, round rim.

Invest in a shifter for EA Sports WRC​

Getting a round steering wheel is important as one can often find themselves holding it in different positions whilst rallying. For the same reason, it is a good idea to invest in a shifter for rallying activities.

When your wheel is upside down and you do not have a separate shifter, it is very easy to mix up the paddles. Sending the car sideways, accidentally downshifting and blowing up the engine is not a rare occurrence for rally fans. Therefore, why not start on the right foot with EA Sports WRC and get a shifter?


Now, it is important to remember that not all shifters offer the same thing. Some are sequential, some are H-pattern layouts and some can transform from one to the other. It is important to think about one’s favourite cars when looking for a shifter as this will dictate what route you take.

Those that look to race the modern rally monsters in EA Sports WRC will be best getting a simple sequential. But if you want to make the most of the game’s vast classic car content, then an H-pattern will be the most immersive. Then again, most will certainly want to experience everything the game has to offer. In that case, look for a shifter that is easily transformed from sequential to H-pattern. You can find our guide to the best sim racing shifters in the article above.

Handbrakes can help​

Is there anything more iconic in rallying that the handbrake turn on the Monte Carlo Rally? Perhaps being the driver to nail a perfect hairpin handbrake turn at Monte is the only thing.

With that in mind, getting a sim racing handbrake is the perfect hardware purchase in anticipation of the next rally game. Unlike the round steering wheel and shifter, this is certainly further down the list in terms of importance for rallying. In fact, most modern wheel bases have buttons on the base themselves which can act as a handbrake button.


The Thrustmaster T300RS for example has an excellent R3 button placement that works as a make-shift handbrake. But, if you do not have an off-wheel button or are looking for greater rallying immersion, a handbrake is a great addition.

There are many sim racing handbrake products on the market currently, from the main brands of Thrustmaster, Fanatec and Moza to more specialised creations by the likes of Heusinkveld and Aikeec. Just beware. The more rally game hardware you get, the more USB ports you will need on your PC.

More Rally Game Hardware​

Aside from the obvious additions one can make to their simulator in anticipation for the next rally game, there are some pieces of equipment for the racer that has it all. If you already own a shifter, round wheel and handbrake, these are the bits and bobs you should be looking to get to best simulate rallying.

Typically racing on rough surfaces, rally cars bounce and bump far more than any road course racer. Furthermore, rallying is one of the few motorsport disciplines in which driving sideways can help gain time on the competition. So surely simulating these additional forces would be of interest to the most in-depth rally enthusiasts.


To do so, there are many solutions on the market to create motion rigs. In fact, most sim racing cockpit manufacturers produce motion platforms such as Next Level Racing or DOF Reality Motion. Some may worry about being sent tumbling around their living room à la Jordan Taylor. For that crowd, there are of course the more basic haptic feedback devices such as Buttkicker’s products that give one’s seat an impact on bumps and engine feedback. Great for immersion, this is one of the last steps to make when building a rallying rig.

Elsewhere, the new EA Sports WRC game will feature the Ford Puma’s Fanatec wheel and button box. If you are looking for the perfect immersive wheel, the rally button module is available on the hardware developer’s website. The wheel is also available to use in the title’s Builder Cars, allowing players to fit their own real life wheel into their personal R1 rally car.

What hardware do you have for rally games? Tell us on Twitter at @OverTake_gg or in the comments down below!
About author
Angus Martin
Motorsport gets my blood pumping more than anything else. Be it physical or virtual, I'm down to bang doors.

Comments

"The Nvidia RTX 5090 is rumored to be nearly twice as fast as RTX 4090, so we should just call it the Titan RTX at this point", "Nvidia RTX 5090 specs rumor suggests up to 70% boost versus 4090", "GeForce RTX 5090 will be 1.7X more powerful than the RTX 4090 and feature a 2.9 GHz Boost Clock", "RTX 5090 rumoured be about 70% faster than the RTX 4090" etc.etc.etc.

I cannot find a single souce that's saying 50%; so you made that up yourself right? The 50%... I expect more from it, at least 65%+ but realistically ~75%. But yes... 2025 is still far away.

No, the CPU won't matter that much for WRC probably. In ACC the CPU was only the bottleneck with a large amount of cars. In WRC there's only one car. The GPU will almost be sure the bottleneck especially for VR users.

But yes, you will enjoy the game for sure. I've not seen a single person on the internet so insanely hyped as you for this title. Your mind is already WRCWRCWRC, it's preprogrammed to enjoy it no matter what. So I believe that yes. ENJOY !

I will also enjoy it probably in the future when the 1.7x/70%/100% faster 5090 will be released and once the game is optimized with OpenXR and once Denuvo is removed. So I fully agree with you about DR2 logic. True, I also had to wait for years(until the 4090 and a Crystal) to finally fully enjoy everything that DR2 has to offer.

WRC looks/sounds good and the physics seem to be good and so is the content, I'm only concerned about what I already wrote but one day we can all enjoy it the way that we want it.
you will wait for 2025 and wrc 25 to play ?? rofl...
with DLSS3 I hope I Can have a good framerate at 4K, or I will reduce to 1440p, not a problem, I play the game as a rally fan, no way I will wait, if you wait you are not a rally fan.
 
Last edited:
I have prepared my "must have" hardware well for this next rally game that i though i will by after long break from rallying, since Dirt Rally "1". It is working smooth and nicely for stage 1. No "iiiiik" sounds from linear movement, buttons are all in place to be all there for easy control, steering is so in hand as it can get, screen is polished and extra screen for some extra info is in place. SO... I welcome you EA WRC, to be punished with my XBox PC controller, screen in front of my face, and other on the side so i can watch some adult stuff same time (news etc of course) while im all around in the woods testing damage model, thru all single detail there is :barefoot:
To fully enjoy WRC with your additional screen for adults, I suggest you purchase a large aircraft broomstick :whistling:
 
you will wait for 2025 and wrc 25 to play ?? rofl...
with DLSS3 I hope I Can have a good framerate at 4K, or I will reduce to 1440p, not a problem, I play the game as a rally fan, no way I will wait, if you wait you are not a rally fan.
Probably I have to wait, yes. I still enjoy DR2 until then and of course the rallycross in AMS2. DLSS is not usable in VR, it gives huge blur/artifacts which ruin everything.

Don't tell me if I'm a rally fan or not. No need to get judgemental here.
 
I wouldn't buy anything for this game.
I understand investing money into something worth it, like a fully fledged sim. But "must have" hardware for a simcade game? Really, RD? :O_o:
Promotion is part of the job. I won't hold it against them. Besides, even simcades play better with nice hardware. So why not.
 
VR folks, don't give up.
dn9316.gif
Don't worry about us, we have real simulations of real rally stages in VR, with real physics and great graphics on Assetto Corsa with CM, CSP and PURE, VR optimization and dozens of incredible mods, there is some crap that's true, but there are so many gems!
We can choose to run them at night, during the day, start at night and finish during the day, in the rain, in the fog, during a storm, etc.
Conclusion, we have ten years to exploit this wonder in VR, and there's more to do, so we don't care about the big jealous people who drool with envy and spend their time posting against the greatest revolution in simulation since the advent of 3D, force feedback, and triple screen, we don't care about them as much as we care about the year 40.
 
If the game is worth buying ( expectations are getting lower with each week of hype for this title) then I will probably look at the new Simagic hydraulic handbrake that Boosted Media were using in their latest video.

Cant see it for sale yet, But looks damn fine.
Look at SRP handbrake (sim racing pro) ;) i found it recently, cool thing!
 
Last edited:
only the pirates are crying

I have no idea how you come to this conclusion....

Why are pirates crying? DRM doesn't matter to them, unless maybe it takes very long to crack.

DRM can:
- get in the way
- cause issues (to the point older games just don't work anymore on modern OS/hardware)
- lower game performance
- prohibit offline play
- act as spyware
- damage your hardware (yes, this has actually been the case in the past)

Hell, even official release where the DRM has been removed have in some cases just implemented the actual release group's cracks :roflmao:

Now I'm not advocating piracy. And like even most pirates (if they can afford it), I buy the games I actually play.
A pirated game copy does not equal a lost sale. Yes a lot of piracy will lessen sales somewhat, but if you're not making a good profit in spite of it, your product / business model is flawed!

I still hate DRM, it sucks. It just does.

no, I have no issue

Mostly you just seem not to have a clue :thumbsup:
 
Last edited:
If Assetto Corsa Competizione runs like butter today on a relatively old PC setup ( Intel Core i7-4790K, 16 GB Ram and an MSI GeForce GTX 980 Gaming 4GB ), why should EA Sports WRC be so much more demanding ?

Sure Codies want as many users as possible but if the PC setup has to cost a fortune they risk loosing a lot of potential buyers !

It really doesn't make much sense to me !
ACC is one of the few UE games that run relatively well, stutter free. Still very heavy on the GPU, the CPU utilization is pretty multithreaded which is not the norm in simracing or UE titles. I think Kunos squeezed out everything they could from Unreal Engine and realized it's still not optimal, hence they switched to developing their own engine again for AC2.
no, I have no issue, only the pirates are crying
In the age of CPU bottlenecks and stuttering on PC, it is never optimal to add another layer that could reduce performance. I see that you protect WRC like hell, but DRM is never your friend as a paying customer. Piracy in just inconvinient nowadays, if a product is great, it's going to succeed financially even if it's "free" to pirate. Younger people nowadays often don't even know how to do it anyway, and older folks don't mind to pay for a quality product.
 
I have the new 14900K and the 4090, and I will enjoy the game, I will use my pg38uq 4k 144hz 38", and it' sure it will work perfectly :D, for a the performance with Unreal Engine, the best CPU :D I won't cry about the performance.
And with a 5090, it' will be better, I remember I have started DR2.0 with a 2080ti, now at 4K all max, anti aliasing max, I can have 144fps with a 4090.....so be patient DR2.0 release was in 2019, 4 years ago.

The rtx 5090 is claimed to be 50% better than the 4090, but we have to wait for 2025 :D, keep cool and enjoy what we have, not a problem to play at 1440p until the 5090

About UNREAL ENGINE : THE CPU, 14900k and you rule the game :D
EA SPORT, IT'S IN THE GAME.
Who's flexing here....
 
"A future GPU and maybe CPU" Is what WRC needs.

Why? Because in every single preview-video of this game I see massive framedrops so it won't be playable with today's hardware. Especially not in VR. The dev's wrote on Discord that they had difficulties to get it to run at 60fps locked and it's still WIP. I don't expect miracles before the release.

Denuvo and Unreal Engine and OpenVR are all 3 disasters when it comes to performance.

Most of these video's are recorded with a 4090 and a single (1440P) monitor, and it still has to many framedrops. So it simply won't work well at the release date.

This must be solved first before the game is actually playable with today's hardware. I probably wait for the 5090/6090 before I buy this game.
You know you can't judge performances on a beta/early access/preview, right? The development is not completed and performance issues and optimization are one of the last things worked on.
Micro freezes/stutters don't have necessarily anything to do with how much the game is demanding. It seems they always happen at the same places. I saw a video of a guy trying all 3 WRC1 cars on the same stage, the few stutters were always at the exact same places. That's something that will be certainly addressed for the release.
On another hand, there is also some videos of the game running perfectly fine (outside of those stutters) in medium settings at 1440p 60 fps on a GTX 1080.
And the recommended configuration is a 2070.
So it will be probably more demanding than DR2.0, but it will be perfectly fine.

(but yes, denuvo is garbage and we don't know how it will run in VR)
 
Last edited:
I saw on a few streams where they couldnt play certain countries/stages (well they could but EA restricted them), maybe due to optimization issues as it is a preview version. I will wait till it releases then consider buying (ps5 sadly as cannot afford to replace old gaming laptop just yet). No point worrying till it releases and the non biased reviews come out... does such a thing exist these days btw?
 
Premium
No mentioning of tripple screens anywhere. In Dirt1 and 2 this is not present wich makes for an awfull ride. Hope this will be better in this version [no tripple - no buy :)]
 
Last edited:
D
Don't worry about us, we have real simulations of real rally stages in VR, with real physics and great graphics on Assetto Corsa with CM, CSP and PURE, VR optimization and dozens of incredible mods, there is some crap that's true, but there are so many gems!
We can choose to run them at night, during the day, start at night and finish during the day, in the rain, in the fog, during a storm, etc.
Please, please tell us more, what is CM, CSP and PURE?
In all caps next time, bold font was not loud enough. :D
 
The must haves are round wheel & handbrake. You can play with the paddles, no problem... but you can't w/o a handbrake! On tarmac you'll be soooo slow, it'll be frustrating bcs you need to modulate the handbrake.
 
Probably I have to wait, yes. I still enjoy DR2 until then and of course the rallycross in AMS2. DLSS is not usable in VR, it gives huge blur/artifacts which ruin everything.

Don't tell me if I'm a rally fan or not. No need to get judgemental here.

I played DR2 today and it was smooth and nice on my 8 year old machine even with most settings on ultra !

I can't imagine EA Sports WRC being that much harder on my PC.
 

Latest News

Article information

Author
Angus Martin
Article read time
5 min read
Views
5,752
Comments
43
Last update

To join the OverTake Racing Club races I want them to be: (multiple choice)

  • Free to access

    Votes: 109 88.6%
  • Better structured events

    Votes: 21 17.1%
  • Better structured racing club forum

    Votes: 20 16.3%
  • More use of default game content

    Votes: 17 13.8%
  • More use of fixed setups

    Votes: 37 30.1%
  • No 3rd party registration pages

    Votes: 46 37.4%
  • Less casual events

    Votes: 12 9.8%
  • More casual events

    Votes: 40 32.5%
  • Other, specify in thread

    Votes: 6 4.9%
Back
Top