PC3 PCARS 3 | New Developer Blog Post: Upgrades

Paul Jeffrey

Premium
Slightly Mad Studios have been busy sharing insights with the wider racing community, with 'Developer Blog' #3 now available to read.
  • New blog looking at car upgrades.
  • Explains how players can upgrade their cars within the game world.
  • Physics based upgrades.

I'm well aware that many warning signs are flashing about the potential simulation aspects of Project CARS 3, and as such the temperature of the community here at RaceDepartment towards this game is apparently fluctuating wildly from the 'sounds exciting' to 'nope, not for me'. However, despite what is obviously a dramatic departure from previous releases into the Project CARS franchise, developers Slightly Mad Studios maintain the new title will contain plenty of realism options to keep the more purist sim racer entertained. I for one am very much looking forward to seeing how the bridge between simulation and accessibility has been achieved once the title releases in the weeks ahead.

As we close in on that release date, the development team have been doing a great job of shedding some light into various aspects of the new title, and this latest blog posting is no different. In post #3 SMS take a closer look at the customisation options set to come within the core gameplay mechanics.

Blog Post #1| Design and Physics: Click Here.
Blog Post #2 | Handling: Click Here.


PCARS 3 1.jpg


Having some fun with car upgrades along with the physics and handling team on Project CARS 3. A 600hp ’66 ’Mustang? On vintage tyres? Heck, yeah!

Nick Pope: Principal Vehicle Handling Designer: For Project CARS 3 we had the opportunity to add something we haven’t brought to the franchise before: Vehicle Upgrades. After discussing it with the team we quickly started to see the benefits to the wider game that they could bring. Firstly, upgrades bring with them more of a connection, greater agency, to the vehicles that players have worked hard to purchase by earning credits in their races. That connection between car and driver matters in real-life racing, and we want it to matter in our game as well. If you find a car that you really like, you can now take it on a journey through large parts of the career with you—you don’t have to abandon it once you progress and the competition steps up a level, you can treat it to a few new parts and keep enjoying it, let the car be the hero too!


Another huge benefit is the variety that upgrades bring. Upgrades effectively bolster our (already impressive) vehicle roster meaning players can move cars further up the classes, we can have much wider variety in the races, with a sort of “run-what-ya-brung” feel. You can take one of your favourite road cars and compete against the thoroughbred race cars if you want. That really fits not only into the whole ‘weekend warrior to racing legend’ component, but also subscribes to what it can be like in the real-world where, you can turn up at a local club race or track day in your tuned M3 and fight it out with the latest supercars.

And finally, a big goal for Project CARS 3 was to give players the opportunity to fine-tune and tailor their own experience. Our improved optional driving assists and aids have achieved that from a player skill standpoint, and upgrades will add to that from an overall player-experience one. Upgrades add more layers to allow players to choose how they want to play, not from settings in a menu, but by letting them create vehicles that feel and handle closer to what they want from their cars. If you’re more confident, you might just focus on power upgrades and manage the lack of traction with your driving talent. If you’re more cautious, you might start by focusing on making the handling safer and reducing your time in the barriers. The combinations are almost limitless and we’re really looking forward to seeing what creations players dream up—from out-and-out handling kings designed to dominate tight circuits to cars made for high-speed ovals, and everything in-between.

Jussi Karjalainen: Handling QA Lead: The other important point, of course, is the authentic nature of the upgrades.

Nick Pope: Principal Vehicle Handling Designer: Yes. I love the fact our upgrades are basically elements of our physics engine that are already there. We’re actually modifying the engine to have more power, we’re simulating adding a turbo and what that would do to the torque curve, and we are improving the suspension to perform better, but through all of this, we’re not “cheating” the system to produce similar results, we’ve modelled these parts according to how they will affect cars out in the real world.

David Kirk: Principal Physics Programmer: The upgrades work using the underlying physics, so a suspension upgrade only affects the suspension components and setting ranges of the suspension. A weight reduction only reduces the weight, and maybe shifts the distribution of weight a little bit. A tyre upgrade only gives you better tyres. The engine upgrades add more power (at various points of the RPM range depending on the upgrade type). If you’re building a car with just engine power, but were already lacking grip, you’ll struggle even more. If you just put better tyres on a car, you won’t increase your top speed on straights, beyond getting a faster exit from the previous corner.

Casey Ringley: Vehicle Technical Art and Handling: And things like the turbo upgrades are not simple modifiers on torque either. We tell the turbos to spin up for more boost, and in many cases this also means more lag. The realistic secondary effects are all in place, can be felt as you drive, and may well change the optimal approach to driving any given car.

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David Kirk: Principal Physics Programmer: Right, and this is all tied together by the PIR (Performance Index Rating) system—the thing that keeps cars balanced when you upgrade them. That’s really what makes all these authentic upgrades “work” from a racing perspective. PIR for each car isn’t based on certain values for certain parts but is a complex model of what happens on each car. Probably easier to explain using an example: Adding lots of power to a front-wheel drive car might not increase the performance rating as much as it would on an AWD car, because it simply can’t put the power down. The physical size, CoG (Centre of Gravity) height, geometry, all the unique aspects of the car affect how each upgrade will change its rating, and that’s why simply sticking more power on a car that has no handling won’t necessarily move its PIR.

Jussi Karjalainen: Handling QA Lead: What David is saying is—big number mean faster car. Small number mean slower car!

David Kirk: Principal Physics Programmer: Thanks for clearing that up, Jussi! Overall, not just, say, top-speed or acceleration. And, of course, all that means cars with similar numbers should turn close laptimes, regardless of the combination of upgrades.

Jussi Karjalainen: Handling QA Lead: That’s the key there. It should be pretty much universal. Same PIR means same performance. Of course, the track type will affect this as it will in the real world. A car that’s all power at PIR 500, and a car that’s all grip at 500PIR, will do different lap times around Monza and Monaco, for example.

Casey Ringley: Vehicle Technical Art and Handling: And all of this really adds to the experience of finding out what works well for each particular vehicle. It’s also a good lesson in what works well for you, as a player. Most people quickly add “all the power” when upgrading their first vehicle and quickly discover that just adding more power doesn’t always result in a quicker car.

David Kirk: Principal Physics Programmer: The PIR is a universal number and calculated to give a balance between circuit types. So when you upgrade just the power of a vehicle, there’s a limit to what the tyres can put down, which means you’ll get a gain in PIR due to the higher top speed, but lower speed acceleration may not improve at all. That part of the PIR calculation takes into account “useable power”: adding grippier tyres enables more power to be used, so then you’ll see bigger jumps in PIR when you add the power upgrades. If you’re getting wheel-spin and bogging down in fourth gear, you’re not really improving the car that much. Peak cornering speeds won’t change with power upgrades either, but tyres, weight, and aero upgrades may well increase, so you get PIR increases from that. Also, the “useable power” calculation considers the CoG height, weight distribution, and drivetype. So a front heavy FWD car may actually be able to put down as much power as a front heavy RWD, and 4WD cars can use the most power. Which I think leads to the inevitable and, for us, fun question—the ideal starting point in-game and which cars are the most fun to upgrade.

PCARS 3 3.jpg



Jussi Karjalainen: Handling QA Lead: Well, before we talk about which cars, the most important upgrade I think are the tyres early on. I remember an old quote by Craig Wilson, Race Engineer to Jenson Button at BAR-Honda back in 2003: “Tyre improvements are the quickest way to improve the performance of any car. Generally, the time gain is equal to, or greater than, all the other factors put together.”

Casey Ringley: Vehicle Technical Art and Handling: Yeah, Jussi nailed it in terms of where to begin upgrading. Treat it like upgrading a real car. Start with tyres, brakes, and suspension to get the most solid platform before dumping power on top.

Jussi Karjalainen: Handling QA Lead: As for what car, I think I’d go straight for the Toyota GT86. It starts off pretty slow, but can be upgraded to quite something, right? The GT86 will only “fall apart” because it’s just so tiny compared to what you want to have in a car of that performance. And the Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution VI TME is a great starter as well.

Casey Ringley: Vehicle Technical Art and Handling: You can go pretty far even with the starter cars, but you’re not quite going to be pulling 1000hp out of the GT86 4-banger, and the short wheelbase and narrow track width will eventually become issues even if you upgrade the suspension and tyres. That said, you can make it an incredibly light and nimble little machine that will be able to cut off a lot of the competition at the knees on more technical tracks.

Jussi Karjalainen: Handling QA Lead: Yup, you’re free to just pile on power to the GT86 for sure. But it’s a car designed for 200-odd horsepower, with narrow, lower-end tyres and suspension to match—but having said that, I have a soft spot for the go-kart that is the GT86 with primarily handling and grip upgrades. It just sticks and sticks, and it’s hard to find the limit where it’ll actually start giving up. Another great upgrade path is taking one of the GT4 cars and just drown it in power. There’s something about taking a carefully balanced, lower-end GT car and then “ruining” it—hehe!

David Kirk: Principal Physics Programmer: Jussi makes a really important point actually—balanced tuning is the key to great performance. There’s only so much power you can throw at an FWD car before you start losing the ability to make any use of it. For example, you’ll be going faster in a straight line, but you won’t stop or turn any better, and it’ll become easy to power understeer in a FWD car or kick the tail out with the throttle on an RWD.

PCARS 3 4.jpg



Jussi Karjalainen: Handling QA Lead: On the other side of the upgrade scale, some of the non-upgradeable racing cars are pretty damn fast, but the Koenigsegg Jesko is already an outrageous beast by itself, and only gets faster from there. Might not be the fastest on every track, but it’s pretty damn nuts. In terms of outright power, some of the electrics might have it licked, but they’re heavier and generally don’t have the Jesko’s aero. So the Jesko starts at around 1300p, but the fuel injection upgrade takes it to 1,600hp or so.

Casey Ringley: Vehicle Technical Art and Handling: Yeah, the Koenigsegg Jesko is a neat one for upgrade authenticity. It has a couple of different engine modes depending on what fuel is used; lower boost pressure and around 1,280hp on petrol, but increased boost and up to 1,600hp when running E85 ethanol. We model the same changes in ours with boost pressure and ignition timing changes.

Nick Pope: Principal Vehicle Handling Designer: Personally,I really enjoy bringing older supercars up towards more modern-day performance. It’s great to compete with some of the greatest cars of their day that maybe didn’t age quite as well as expected because their performance is sometimes overshadowed by advancements in vehicle technology, so making them more relevant and competitive is seriously rewarding and fun.

Jussi Karjalainen: Handling QA Lead: Yeah, the main reason some of those analogue supercars from the 1980s we love are “slow” is due to the tyres.

Casey Ringley: Vehicle Technical Art and Handling: My personal favourite is the KTM X-Bow GT4. GT4 cars, as a rule, tend to be heavily restricted, and this one especially so. To fit in the GT4 performance window it has a high ride-height cutting roughly 30% off aero performance and maybe 200hp off what the engine is capable of—and then they add over 100kg of ballast weight. Using the upgrade system to remove all those restrictions turns it into the low-flying spaceship it looks like, and it’s a fantastic drive.

Jussi Karjalainen: Handling QA Lead: Wait, can we put a turbo on the RS1600 Escort?

Casey Ringley: Vehicle Technical Art and Handling: Heck yeah!

Jussi Karjalainen: Handling QA Lead: I need to check this out. I may need to change my vote. Also my pants! Awww, actually, it only peaks out at only 281hp. I mean 281hp supercharged horses on an 850kg car on vintage tyres is nothing to sneeze at, but a 400hp Escort would have been hilarious! Oh, the Mustang ’66 goes to over 600hp … on the same tyres … now this sounds really wild! I gotta go, guys, something urgent I need to do …


Original Source: Project CARS 3

Project CARS 3 will release on Xbox One, PS4 and PC this summer.

Want to discuss this new game with fellow sim racing fans? No worries, head over to the Project CARS 3 sub forum here at RaceDepartment and start up a new thread!

PCARS 3 footer.jpg
 
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Well I have a Fanatec setup but I've still remained a bit intimidated to try a full sim. I put in some VR time on PCars2, but I have a short attention span and I end up running the same cars over the same tracks and never get out of my comfort zone. Maybe this will be the game where I try and step up a bit more - not that this is shaping up to be the sort of "sim" people take seriously, but it could at least be fun.

I wish i had a Fanatec set up! Seriously mate there's nothing to be intimidated about with 'Full sims' Pcars2 regarding FFB is a can of worms! Get either AC, ACC, AMS2 or RF2 and just play offline like i do! These sim's will do your Fanatec set up some justice! I race with a T300 now (Got it about 2 months ago) Before that it was a microsoft sidewinder FFB wheel and a G25 which i used for like 12ish years!
 
This interview reads like an AI watched hours of Steve Jobs and Elon Musk speeches then ran it through the filter of a kids show that teaches you how to deal with divorced parents.

Really?

To me it read like Jussi has had quite a bit of input on how to make the upgrade system not suck from both a physics and performance rating perspective.

We'll see how it pans out I guess.
 
It's still better than Forza, and if PC3 is anything like the first two people will make custom profiles for it that greatly improve it.
You are probably right, I just don't get the appeal of using a FFB wheel and nice pedals and such just to slide around like Ken Block on steroids with no consequences while playing a sim-cade. Forza genre games just feel more natural to me in third person view with a controller.
I do realize that I am a dying breed (literally) though and that the target demographic of the entire simulation genre has shifted and has different preferences of what they want out of a game in this genre nowadays. Quality VR support is more important than tire models and users would prefer that devs spend their limited resources coding competitive multiplayer matchmaking rather than hiring physics engineers.
 
You are probably right, I just don't get the appeal of using a FFB wheel and nice pedals and such just to slide around like Ken Block on steroids with no consequences while playing a sim-cade. Forza genre games just feel more natural to me in third person view with a controller.
I do realize that I am a dying breed (literally) though and that the target demographic of the entire simulation genre has shifted and has different preferences of what they want out of a game in this genre nowadays. Quality VR support is more important than tire models and users would prefer that devs spend their limited resources coding competitive multiplayer matchmaking rather than hiring physics engineers.
The vast majority of racing games are better with a wheel. The only ones that aren't are:

-hyper-arcade ones like Burnout and hell even then they'd probably still be more fun
-ones where you aren't even driving a car with wheels like Wipeout or F-Zero (still, I'd love to try out a Wipeout game with a yoke and full cockpit...)

There's a reason blatantly unrealistic arcade titles like Daytona USA and the Initial D arcade games use wheels and pedals. It's just inherently more fun with authentic controls. Forza Horizon 4 having kinda crappy wheel support is a major reason why I haven't bought it though I loved FH3. Wheels are just more fun.
 
They can claim they have 'simulated' the upgrades all they want & claim its authentic, but i can't see it being much fun if you can win races based on you upgrades. Race cars should have bop, that's the whole point of adding the weight on the KTM X-Bow GT4 and the other restrictions. They do it for a reason.

I don't think that's what they're planning. They have a performance index (PIR) which will determine which class you race against. The point is you can take the same car and apply a BOP to it and use it in different classes.
 
They continue to talk about the physics, handling, and what you can do to the cars, but still have no idea how long max the races are
in PC3. With these type of games like GRID, I just jump in a car with its default settings, select a track, and do my races. Now in GRID,
the max length race is 10 laps, Is PC3 game more laps than this?

So Paul or Developers of the game, what is the max length of a race in PC3 on any track?

Thanks for your continued updates on PC3.

take care.
 
I hope this game is going to be tons of fun, just to see all the angry “hardcore” simracing army’s butthurt :roflmao:
I don't doubt it will be tons of fun, and most likely it will reach a much bigger audience than the small sim racing niche, especially on console. And there's nothing bad about that, if that's what they're aiming for, so there's no reason to be but hurt in the first place.

I'm just wondering why they are trying to sell features like morphing tire compounds as simulation, which I guess won't be such a well working selling point. That smells a bit like marketing trying to cover bases they can't, and lot's of people don't like to get misdirected, especially if this happened before.

The distrust against SMS is an issue following selling tactics like that. If you as a studio manages to get a good part of the early backers, your fans, riled up against you to the point that they flat out hate you, you might want to think about your marketing strategy.
 
I don't doubt it will be tons of fun, and most likely it will reach a much bigger audience than the small sim racing niche, especially on console. And there's nothing bad about that, if that's what they're aiming for, so there's no reason to be but hurt in the first place.

I'm just wondering why they are trying to sell features like morphing tire compounds as simulation, which I guess won't be such a well working selling point. That smells a bit like marketing trying to cover bases they can't, and lot's of people don't like to get misdirected, especially if this happened before.

The distrust against SMS is an issue following selling tactics like that. If you as a studio manages to get a good part of the early backers, your fans, riled up against you to the point that they flat out hate you, you might want to think about your marketing strategy.

After reading all that's known until now I'm coming to the conclusion that there will be no real physics features in PC3 (like "morphing tyre compounds"). It would be completely useless as tyres won't degrade and tenths of kilograms of fuel won't be used. Both having a much bigger impact on physics on track than anything SMS would now be able to come up with. So it will be placebo.
Taking out pitstops takes the rest of realism from the game - all that just by removing pitstops.

Looking at the PC2 online community I understand SMS, though. People are almost exclusively racing 5 laps without damage. So the PC-community is 99% about gaming and 1% about sim. Want a sim? Go elsewhere.
 
Looking at the PC2 online community I understand SMS, though. People are almost exclusively racing 5 laps without damage. So the PC-community is 99% about gaming and 1% about sim. Want a sim? Go elsewhere.

You are looking at pickup races. Leagues don't run 5 lap races and its unusual to race without damage. Pickup racers are not 99% of the PC community. They are more like 10% of the community. The vast majority do not race on-line.

But it is true that the majority don't do pitstops or rarely do pitstops, as with most sims. But they do do fuel use, tyre wear and they drive out of the garage and down the pitlane in practice and qualifying. Something we probably can't do in PC3.
 
Which could mean that the developers don't think that reality is fun:)
Perhaps the ffb is better than what people suppose.

By the way i hope that city tracks will not have 90° corners and that we will drive thru central parks.

City tracks are boring most of the times...

It looks like Gran Turismo 7 is on the same plan (with nice mountain tracks).


Cars look photorealistic.
 
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