8.6 Editor Score
Excellent85 Metacritic
Original PC ReleaseVery Positive Steam Rating
50,000+ reviewsWhat We Think
Assetto Corsa was released in December 2014 by Kunos Simulazioni and has spent the decade since becoming one of the most enduring and heavily modded sim racing titles ever made. In a genre that moves fast, it has stayed relevant longer than almost any competitor, and the reason is straightforward: the physics engine is exceptional, and the modding community built around it is unmatched.
The driving experience is where Assetto Corsa earns its reputation. Tyre temperature, weight transfer, surface grip variation, and the mechanical behaviour of each individual car are all modelled with precision. Every car handles differently in ways that feel grounded in how each vehicle actually behaves. The weight of a GT3 car through a high-speed corner is a fundamentally different experience from threading a classic Formula 1 machine through a chicane, and the game communicates those differences through its force feedback in ways that competitors of the same era rarely matched. At its best, when it is just you, your car, and a winding ribbon of tarmac, it is one of the purest expressions of driving pleasure that gaming offers.
The modding community is the primary reason to buy Assetto Corsa in 2026. Thousands of community-created cars are available covering everything from obscure road cars to historically significant race cars that will never appear in a licensed title. Track mods cover circuits across the world. Graphical overhaul mods transform the game's visuals to a level that was not achievable at the time of original release. The modding infrastructure is mature, well-documented, and actively maintained.
A force feedback steering wheel and pedal set is strongly recommended. The game was designed around wheel input and the gap between pad and wheel is wide enough to matter significantly. VR is supported and represents one of the most immersive sim racing experiences available on PC. The Ultimate Edition, which bundles all official DLC including Silverstone, Monza, Spa, Nurburgring, and Imola, is the recommended purchase for any new buyer.
What Is Assetto Corsa?
Assetto Corsa, Italian for Racing Setup, is a PC-first driving simulator developed by Kunos Simulazioni and released in December 2014. A decade after launch it remains one of the most enduring and heavily modded sim racing titles ever made. In a genre that moves fast, it has stayed relevant longer than almost any competitor, and the reason is straightforward: the physics engine is exceptional, and the modding community built around it is unmatched.
The Driving Experience
Physics and Force Feedback
The physics engine is where Assetto Corsa earns its reputation. Tyre temperature, weight transfer, surface grip variation, and the mechanical behaviour of each individual car are modelled with a precision that puts it comfortably at the serious end of the sim racing spectrum. Every car handles differently in ways that feel grounded in how each vehicle actually behaves. The weight of a GT3 car through a high-speed corner is a fundamentally different experience from threading a classic Formula 1 machine through a narrow chicane, and the game communicates those differences through its force feedback in ways that competitors of the same era rarely matched.
The game is at its absolute best with just you, your car, and a winding ribbon of tarmac. The forested inclines of Spa, the historic loops of Monza, the ever-challenging Nurburgring Nordschleife: lap after lap, pushing yourself and your machine to the limit, it is one of the purest expressions of driving pleasure that gaming offers.
Wheel vs Gamepad
With a gamepad the experience is considerably diminished. The game was designed around wheel input and the assists required to make it playable on a controller remove much of what makes the physics system interesting. If you are playing on a pad, be honest with yourself about whether Assetto Corsa is the right choice for your setup.
Content and the Ultimate Edition
The base game includes a selection of road and race cars alongside a handful of real-world circuits. Taken in isolation the content is modest compared to newer titles. The significant expansion came through official DLC packs, with tracks including Silverstone, Monza, Spa, Nurburgring, and Imola, and cars spanning road cars, GT3, GT4, formula vehicles, and historic machinery across multiple eras. The Ultimate Edition bundles all officially released DLC and is the recommended purchase for any new buyer in 2026.
Modding: The Real Reason to Buy in 2026
What the Community Has Built
The modding community is the primary reason Assetto Corsa remains relevant a decade after release. Thousands of community-created cars are available, covering everything from obscure road cars to historically significant race cars that will never appear in a licensed title. Track mods cover circuits across the world including fictional layouts. Graphical overhaul mods transform the game's visuals to a level that was not achievable at the time of original release and bring it in line with more modern titles.
The modding infrastructure is mature, well-documented, and actively maintained. For players who want to build a bespoke sim racing experience tailored precisely to their interests, no other title offers the same combination of physics quality and content breadth.
Assetto Corsa vs Assetto Corsa Evo
Assetto Corsa Evo launched into Early Access in early 2025 as the official successor and has received mixed reviews, currently sitting at Mixed on Steam. For players who want a mature, content-rich simulator with years of patches, a vast modding scene, and a proven physics engine, the original Assetto Corsa remains the better purchase. Assetto Corsa Evo is the forward-looking choice for players who want to be part of the next chapter's Early Access development.
VR and Hardware
Assetto Corsa supports VR and is widely regarded as one of the best sim racing experiences available in virtual reality. A force feedback steering wheel and pedal set is strongly recommended. Entry-level options from Thrustmaster and Logitech are fully compatible and significantly enhance the experience over a gamepad. The game's age means system requirements are modest, though a modern mid-range PC is recommended for heavily modded installations running at high settings.
Is Assetto Corsa Worth Buying in 2026?
With a Steering Wheel
For sim racing enthusiasts with a steering wheel, yes, unambiguously. The physics engine remains class-leading in certain respects, the modding scene provides effectively unlimited content, and the Ultimate Edition price makes it one of the best value purchases available in the genre. The career mode is thin, the AI is imperfect, and it shows its age in places without mods applied. But for the purpose it was designed for, providing the most authentic driving experience available on a PC, it still does the job better than most of what came after it.
Without a Steering Wheel
For players without a wheel who want a casual racing game, there are better platform-specific options. Be honest about your hardware before purchasing.
Strengths
- Physics engine remains class-leading for tyre and weight transfer simulation
- Modding community provides thousands of cars and tracks beyond the official content
- Graphical overhaul mods bring visuals in line with modern releases
- Full VR support - one of the best sim racing experiences available in VR
- Ultimate Edition bundles all official DLC including the best real-world circuits
- Exceptional value - mature, fully patched title at a fraction of newer sim prices
- Force feedback implementation communicates vehicle behaviour with exceptional fidelity
Weaknesses
- Career mode is thin and functional rather than engaging
- AI behaviour is erratic in traffic situations
- Gamepad experience significantly diminished compared to wheel - designed for hardware input
- Shows its age visually without graphical mods applied
- Assetto Corsa Evo in Early Access represents the future of the series
Is This Game Right For You?
For sim racing enthusiasts with a steering wheel, Assetto Corsa remains one of the most compelling purchases available in the genre regardless of its age. The physics engine, the modding ecosystem, and the Ultimate Edition's content breadth combine to make it better value than most newer releases at a fraction of the price. For players without a wheel who want a casual racing game, there are better platform-specific options. The honest buying decision hinges almost entirely on your hardware setup.
Reasons To Love
- You have a force feedback steering wheel and want the most authentic driving physics available
- You want access to thousands of community-made cars and tracks through the modding scene
- You own a VR headset and want one of the best sim racing VR experiences on PC
- You want exceptional value from a mature, fully patched title at a low price point
Reason To Avoid
- You only have a gamepad and want an arcade-style racing experience
- You want a polished career mode or story-driven progression
- You find modding setup and management too technically demanding
- You want the latest visual fidelity without applying graphical mods manually
Our Recommendation
Buy the Ultimate Edition. The base game's content is modest. The Ultimate Edition bundles all official DLC and is the complete version of Assetto Corsa. It is the only version worth purchasing for a new player in 2026.
If you have a wheel: this is an unambiguous recommendation. The physics engine remains exceptional, the modding scene provides unlimited content, and the price makes it one of the best value purchases available in the genre. Install the base game, add a graphical overhaul mod, and then explore the community content at your own pace.
If you only have a gamepad: be honest with yourself before buying. The experience with a controller is playable with assists enabled but does not represent the game at its best. Consider whether Assetto Corsa Evo, currently in Early Access with Mixed Steam reviews, or an arcade racing alternative might better suit your setup.
On Assetto Corsa Evo: for players who want a mature, content-rich simulator with a proven physics engine and vast modding scene, the original remains the better purchase in 2026.