


But there's plenty more to race, like the Landrush events, where you race against other cars on short dirt tracks in the deserts of the US and Mexico. Point-to-point rallies are still on the menu in DiRT 4, with plenty of routes through the forests and over the hills of Wales, Michigan, Spain, Sweden, and Australia. DiRT Rally was also a departure from the DiRT franchise, which had always been more accessible and aimed beyond just rallying's infamous "bobble-hatted" fans.

The game was also rather specialized, sticking very much to the discipline of rallying, with a little wheel-to-wheel rallycross thrown in for good measure. While we praised DiRT Rally for its fantastic simulation, describing it as "punishingly difficult" is not unfair. Enter DiRT 4, available starting June 6 on Playstation 4, Xbox One, and Steam. Now, Paul Coleman and his team at Codemasters have a new game for us that builds on the success of DiRT Rally, but it should entice a far wider audience. The achievement was all the more notable because-while I tend to stick almost exclusively to racing games-I haven't really enjoyed off-road or rally games very much in the past. Last year, UK studio Codemasters blew my nomex racing socks off with DiRT Rally. Release Date: J(Day One Edition), June 9, 2017
#Ne xs dirt rally images Pc#
Platform: PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Windows PC (Steam)
