Skip advert
Advertisement

Gran Turismo Sport review - First impressions

Hands-on at last with GT Sport the latest game in the Gran Turismo series on the PS4

Gran Turismo is 20 years old this year, which seems like an appropriate time for one of the most important games in the series so far, GT Sport, to make its debut.

GT Sport is not like other Gran Turismo games. Well, in some ways, anyway - and if you’ve not previously been a fan of Gran Turismo, then GT Sport is similar enough in many ways that it’s unlikely to change your mind.

Advertisement - Article continues below

> Best driving games on sale now

GT Sport introduction

Never before has Gran Turismo been focused so much on online racing, and so little on the amassment of weird and wonderful vehicles and completing hundreds of different single-player events.

The non-canonical title - GT Sport rather than Gran Turismo 7, as the next full title will be - is the first clue to this. The second is the relative lack of early-game content, with just a handful of arcade mode races, licence test events and similar practise-style tasks to teach you the basics of the game.

> Click here for our latest Subcription offers for Christmas

You can, of course, look through the in-game dealerships, but you won’t be buying a used vehicle this time around, and the car list is heavily weighted towards race cars, rather than road vehicles. That initial frisson of excitement from having 10,000 credits with which to buy your first vehicle? Gone - the game gifts you a car simply for booting it up, and your opening balance is 50,000 credits.

Both money and other vehicles are much easier to come by than they were in the early days of previous GT games. Work at the licence tests, achieving gold in every one, and you’ll already have a large amount of money and a handful high-end cars at your disposal by the end. After four or five hours of play and no more than about 200 in-game miles, we’d collected around 15 cars without spending a penny, and had more than 1 million credits to our name.

Advertisement - Article continues below
Skip advert
Advertisement
Advertisement - Article continues below

For some players at least, this will be a good thing, quickly glossing over the aspect that some considered a bit of a grind - buy cheap car, enter race, win a little money, tune it up, and repeat - with the quickest cars still well out of reach after days of play. But seasoned Gran Turismo players might feel a little short-changed at the removal of one of GT’s unique selling points.

Gran Turismo Sport gameplay

Thankfully, the gameplay goes some way to making up for it. First, the graphics are beautiful, and everything runs at breakneck speed. Sound design is a big step forward from previous games, and while the road cars can still sound a little thin at times, the race cars finally have the anger and intensity you’d expect of them, with gear whine, whipcrack gearshifts and bellicose exhaust notes replicated to an impressive degree.

And the handling is the best yet in a GT game, striking the right balance between realism and accessibility. Novices should be able to navigate most tracks unscathed and there are plenty of driving aids to help out, but more experienced players, having turned off all the assists, will quickly identify the fiery temperaments of some vehicles and have to keep on top of tyre slip and weight transfer.

Cars behave much as you’d expect from their real-life counterparts, and the same applies whether you’re driving merely briskly, or dancing over the limits of grip - or indeed, sailing way beyond those limits on some of GT Sport’s rally courses, which can be a lot of fun. Play the game with a wheel and pedals setup, as we do - a Logitech G29 - and the fun and interaction ramps up further.

A wheel and pedals should give you the best hope when competing online, too. We’re yet to delve into the online aspect that makes up the bulk of GT Sport - so expect more on that soon, including the official FIA-sanctioned events - but the game’s creators promise a matching system to put you among drivers of similar experience, and measures to reduce the potential for dirty drivers to infiltrate online lobbies.

For the time being, we’re excited to dip deeper into what GT Sport has to offer, but conclude this first look review with the caveat that those expecting a deep single-player experience probably won’t get the greatest value from GT Sport.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Best cars of the 1980s – performance icons from the decade of excess
Best '80s cars
Best cars

Best cars of the 1980s – performance icons from the decade of excess

The performance car as we’ve come to adore it has its origins in the 1980s. Family cars got fast, fast cars got faster, all of them were huge fun
19 Aug 2025
Mercedes-Benz EQS 2025 review – electric S-class takes aim at the BMW i7
Mercedes EQS – front
In-depth reviews

Mercedes-Benz EQS 2025 review – electric S-class takes aim at the BMW i7

Mercedes put all of its resources into creating a bespoke all-electric flagship, but it’s not quite worthy of replacing the S-class yet
18 Aug 2025
Aston Martin Vantage (2006) Fast Fleet test – living with a £30k V8 Aston
evo Fast Fleet Aston Martin Vantage
Long term tests

Aston Martin Vantage (2006) Fast Fleet test – living with a £30k V8 Aston

How much does an early V8 Vantage really cost to run? We’re starting to find out
21 Aug 2025