

It makes me wish that the game would follow a certain other racing series and make champion seasons customizable or even shorter. But I do feel the addition of the “2020-like start” option is quite a neat touch. It is quite similar to last year’s iteration, albeit with some new coat of paint. It is a case of “what isn’t broken, don’t fix it” for this year’s career mode. Now the bikes sound distant to one another, from the whine of the KTM to the heavy metallic sounding nature of the Ducati, it is something diehard MotoGP fans would enjoy getting to enjoy the sights and now sounds of these machineries.


The last-gen version is presentable and fully playable, mind you, but I feel that the jump to a higher frame rate is quite important as we head into the realm of faster loading thanks to the power of the SSD.Īudio has received quite an improvement too. The speed of the bikes is now fully felt thanks to the current-gen versions, and I couldn’t iterate how important it is finally to have 60fps on this sort of racing series. Its addition to the game helps sell the feel of you being a part of the circus within the series rather well.Īnd on the graphics side, the game looks quite well, both on the last and current-gen of consoles. Out of the gate, you’ll see the team at Milestone incorporating the MotoGP broadcast overlays within all of the game. So have they caught up with the times as well? Presentation From its humble beginning during the 7th generation of consoles to its current iteration now on the most powerful consoles to date. MotoGP has been quite an interesting series to look at since its first entry way back in 2013. Corner after corner, holding on the edge as your tires are about to give away. You and your bike, hammering down the lap times as you fight the Suzukis in their home turf. It is a fine balance between man and machine.
