I just watched a basic turning video. I got lost and confused most of the time. I do not plan to race online. I do what to get all my books and get cars from the 1960s and all my license (the first one is done). I have upgraded tires and other parts. I hope I did not make things worse for me.
I know what you mean, I was similar when gt7 first came out. Played all the previous games, and my idea of tuning was to just upgrade most things, not making any tweaks to parameters
.
I've learnt a lot more in gt7, watching videos and this thread in particular, at 1st looked complicated/confusing headache (still is but to lesser degree).
Settings! Let's talk! * Finally did a tuning video on YouTube. You can find it on my YouTube channel. * https://youtube.com/@prtcountersteer?si=aklB5nLj0Fq_qHSA Wow! So empty! GTPlanet has become trash.
www.gtplanet.net
But i've since reverted to either stock, then upgrading tyres (slightly, so not going to racing softs if its a road car
) and brakes, then things like air filters. And Praiano's tunes, which are great but sometimes I want to keep car in its stock class/level and to admire how it looks in replays. Sadly,way the game is setup, to get most performance for pp, tuners end up raising rear, lowering front a lot, which makes cars look awful, and spoils things slightly.
Plus, it feels like by the time youput stage 4 body weight reduction, high turbo, wide body, racing ports, irreversible changes, you're not driving the car you set out to buy, but something closer to a race car, which can bug me too.
I prefer stock with light upgrade, otherwise I'm prone to spending hours making tweaks to suspension, lsd etc going back and forth between garage and time trial - but thats just me
.
You may find the calculator app/tool useful thats pinned in tuning menu. I bought that too and you can enter a load of parameters to get a more optimum output for each car, without needing to go crazy on buying parts.