

There's a bunch of new features that keep the fast-paced racing game feeling fresh, such as an even deeper ten-year career mode that allows players to take a car as uncompetitive as a McLaren-Honda and turn it into a title winner. Many fans wondered whether last year's racer could be topped, but the Birmingham-based studio has looks to have produced another superlative F1 game. Here's what critics and The Week have to say before the game's launch tomorrow: The Week reviews F1 2017Ĭodemasters hit the sweet spot with F1 2016, which introduced an intricate and challenging handling model alongside the return of a much-needed career mode after the feature was scrapped on the previous game.

Driving cars faster will lower lap time and get you to the end of the race faster, but it also can increase the risk of your engine breaking down. The game also comes with a deeper career mode that forces players to manage the reliability of their car. These cars include Ayrton Senna's McLaren MP4/6 from 1991 and Fernando Alonso's 2006 championship-winning Renault R26. Players can choose from a selection of 12 old F1 cars from the past 30 years. This year's game sees the return of classic cars after a four-year absence from the series. Hamilton holds off Vettel to win classic Spanish Grand Prixĭeveloped by Codemasters, F1 2017 follows all the drivers, teams and circuits from the real-world Formula 1 season, allowing players to get behind the wheel of Lewis Hamilton's W08 F1 car and battle it out with Sebastian Vettel for the driver's championship.Star Wars Battlefront II: reviews, new features and release.E3 2017: F1 2017, Metroid Prime 4 and more.
