Details Emerge for Test Drive Unlimited Solar Crown

Test Drive Unlimited Solar Crown.jpg
After a long drought of information on Test Drive Unlimited Solar Crown, new details have emerged about the game. In the first in a monthly series of newsletters, specifics about the game’s car purchasing and customisation system were announced.

Image Credit: Kylotonn Games

Originally scheduled for release at the end of last year, Test Drive Unlimited Solar Crown is one of the most anticipated games on the horizon. Bringing back the legendaryTest Drive name, it is set on a faithful recreation of Hong Kong island, and features an enticing story mode.

In recent months, information regarding the game has been scarce. But in a newsletter released this morning, Kylotonn Games goes into great detail. The post is the first in a monthly series of updates coming out until the game’s release, it delves into the car purchase and customisation aspects of the game, which add a new twist to the Test Drive formula.

Buying Cars in TDU Solar Crown​

On paper, it seems the main competitor to KT Games’ next release is Forza Horizon 5. But, as it turns out, the two titles will differ in one key, game-changing aspect. According to the newsletter posted to the game’s Steam page, earning enough cash to buy the right car will be a long process.


Compare this to the Forza way of doing things and you’ll easily spot the difference. One can get a new car for tapping the handbrake or simply staying on the road in Horizon.

When it takes a player ‘several hours’ to afford their next car, a special procedure can make up for the grind. The next Test Drive game will, like previous iterations, provide a realistic car purchase experience. Players will have to visit one of 14 dealerships, each catering to different car types. Apart from Ferrari and Lamborghini, who get their own dedicated dealerships, brands will be mixed together.

Here, players can get out of their cars and walk about. Then, they can meet other players and chat to them as if getting together at a car event. Once you’ve laid eyes on the perfect model, you can go through the entire process of speccing your car. Every real-world option for each car will be available in-game from wheels to colours and trim levels.

1677693490760.png


As the game’s name suggests, a test drive will be in order before handing over your cash. When you do confirm your purchase, the newsletter mentions that you will receive your new keys. This will surely be a short cut scene, though it will be interesting to see if these keys play a larger part in-game.

Modifying your Car​

Just like the dealerships, workshops in Test Drive Unlimited Solar Crown act as “social hubs.” These locations allow players to get out of their cars and walk about as a personified avatar. players can chat to others as they too work on their cars. It seems these hubs will play a major role in the MMO aspect of the game.

It’s at workshops that players can modify their cars with any modifications not available at dealerships. Performance modifications are broken down into six different categories, with 13 parts available to tune. The post mentions the engine, gearbox and suspension. So, one can assume the categories will follow the lines of power, traction, braking and so-on.

1677693531134.png


Visual modifications will also feature in the game, though only the mention of liveries features in the update post. It’s likely that body kits and aero packages will be available in-game too.

A full livery editor will feature in the new Test Drive game. It will have a number of paint finishes from matte to chrome as well as many decals and stickers. But, players will find themselves limited in how they can paint their cars. Depending on story progression and clan affiliation, some parts may be unavailable.


Overall, it seems car ownership will be a much more hands-on experience than other open world racing titles. Not only will pay outs require work to afford each car, the process of buying a new vehicle will be a thought out experience, intended to provide a bond between player and machine.

More updates regarding the game will release each month in newsletter form. With a release date as yet unclear, it’s impossible to know how many more newsletters will come out before the game.
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

So it's going to be even more grindy than GT7?
I guess it depends how fun it will be to grind. I know I enjoyed every second of TDU and it didn't give the player everything on a silver platter. However, back then the whole mentality of gamers (mine included) was different. Nowadays people want to unlock everything quickly, meanwhile they complain that there isn't enough content.
 
It's made Kylotonn, the same studio who created the disastrous WRC serie that doesn't clome close to a "real" simulator... I will pass on this one..
You mean those same sims where you can drive on the grass to cool the tires, or disconnect ARBs, or use maximum toe in, or drive on the walls, those other "sims"? right...

At least they gave us a game, the other ones can't even accomplish that.
 
You mean those same sims where you can drive on the grass to cool the tires, or disconnect ARBs, or use maximum toe in, or drive on the walls, those other "sims"? right...

At least they gave us a game, the other ones can't even accomplish that.
Nah, he probably means RBR - the ultra-realistic rally simulator, where bumping a bush at 10 km/h with the front headlight causes your rear differential to explode and all brakes to fail.
 
i hope the game matches the 3d render bc its 2023 and theres no excuses. No forza / nfs hybrid pls.
 
I hope they dont misunderstand. People dont want to win a car each 5 minutes like in forza or earn enough cash to buy the fastest car and max it out with upgrades within 1 hour of playing, but that's still way better than spending a week nonstop grinding for the next vehicle.
 
It's made Kylotonn, the same studio who created the disastrous WRC serie that doesn't clome close to a "real" simulator... I will pass on this one..
WRC physics is more than good and advanced enough to make a great arcade physics from it. Most things lacking from sim physics are not even there in arcade physics, or in a very basic way. And a studio able to make a decent simish physics is more than capable to make a great arcade one.
Same thing with the FFB, an average/perfectible FFB in a sim can make a fantastic FFB in an arcade game.

It doesn't meen they'll do it, but it should at least be better than TDU2 (I just completed TDU1 and enjoyed it quite a bit, an then started TDU2...).
 
Last edited:
You mean those same sims where you can drive on the grass to cool the tires, or disconnect ARBs, or use maximum toe in, or drive on the walls, those other "sims"? right...

At least they gave us a game, the other ones can't even accomplish that.
Are you saying that you can't disconnect ARB or use max toe on a real car? The other twos, you are right, obviously.
 
The grinding in kyloton's V Rally 4 was good imo, not too slow, not too fast. I imagine they'll be able to make it right in this game. I've tried WRC9 and it wasn't bad. I think the driving will be ok. I assume they will use their track generator from V Rally 4 (which I think was a brillant idea, generating paths on an existing map instead of building tracks with tiles) to give the game lors of different races.

What really is a concern imo is their non fixed bugs and unfinished games history. Obviously with such a project, which requires refinment over several months, even several years, after its release, this abandonning attitude would be a huge issue. This is something absolutely new for this developper, an absolute cultural change. For a company, such a cultural 360° turn is a very hard challenge. They for sure haven't fired their employees and they have to change the way the company have been making them work for years. And this will happen only if the management team has understand the company had to change. I hope it has...
 

Latest News

Article information

Author
Angus Martin
Article read time
3 min read
Views
14,789
Comments
49
Last update

How long have you been simracing

  • < 1 year

    Votes: 88 12.7%
  • < 2 years

    Votes: 63 9.1%
  • < 3 years

    Votes: 71 10.2%
  • < 4 years

    Votes: 44 6.3%
  • < 5 years

    Votes: 97 14.0%
  • < 10 years

    Votes: 95 13.7%
  • < 15 years

    Votes: 60 8.6%
  • < 20 years

    Votes: 39 5.6%
  • < 25 years

    Votes: 33 4.7%
  • Ok, I am a dinosaur

    Votes: 105 15.1%
Back
Top