Are they? I'm not convinced. One of my biggest concerns so far this season is that the cars look far easier to drive, especially on the throttle. If anything, with things such as Mercedes struggling to get into the correct tyre temperature window, this season so far looks like it has all the gimmicks of the start of 2012, but with easier-handling cars to make up for the loss of the awful "driving on eggshells" tyres.We can forgive depressed overtake numbers if the cars are spectacular to watch - like in 2017, so far.
They may not be outright awful, but they're considerably more boring than the 2016 cars to me so far. Not only that, but this will also absolutely impact my enjoyment of anything similar as a simracer once more games start to get cars that are like these. Getting rid of the idiotic philosophy behind the Pirelli tyres and just bringing race day lap times closer to the qualifying times would've likely helped a lot more than the 2017 regulation changes they went ahead with.
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