Update :
Citroën Xantia 3.0i V6 Exclusive
Citroën C5 V6 Exclusive
Citroën C4 Coupe 2.0 VTS
Citroën GT Road Car
Citroën GT Concept
And lucky number 200 is... the Tank Car !
Though there's a problem with the PP recalculation when I register it in the table : it is so slow that it gives instantly 100 PP more to the Spitfire
So I put it outside the table in the Excel file for now, until I find a solution to exclude that from comparisons (and I'll probably do the same thing for a few other cars such as the Buick Special)
Daihatsu Storia / Sirion CX 2WD
Daihatsu Storia / Sirion CX 4WD
Daihatsu Storia / Sirion X4
Mazda RX-8
Mazda RX-8 Type-E
Mazda RX-8 Type-S
Mazda RX-8 Type-S
I made some experiences in open lobbies so far, and it seems my PP recalculation system works pretty well. I tried a few cars with positive cheat indicators at the PP my Excel gives them, and it was spot on.
There are a few flaws in it, though, but they are mainly isolated cases, or time ranges I don't have enough cars in at the moment to give accurate results. Also, a few cars having a huge difference of time compared to a regular car at the same PPs are weighting too much in the PP average, which unsettles the balance. For example, the Citroën GT Concept gives too much PPs to the VW VGT. Some cars, being basically the same and separated by not much more than 0.010s, have several PP difference.
But I'm well aware of those issues, and already have a few ideas to try out. Most of them will require to wait until the end of the testings. I could also find and experiment some functions to exclude a few entries from the macros, and adjust those manually. I think I'll begin to try different formulas when I'll have nothing else to do (that will happen pretty much soon) on different files and see how they behave.
That brings me to something else : don't expect much more updates until the end of the month : we received the keys of our brand new flat and began to do the stuff we wanted to make ourselves, then we'll have to move out the furnitures and stuff, and then a few days at the hotel because the electricity is not activated yet... at least, it's the builders company that pays the bill
In short, I may have a run tomorrow, but after that, it's 2 weeks off for me
Now, for the 200 cars intermediate sum up (excluding the Tank Car for the reason mentionned above) :
Top 10 "real street cars" :
McLaren MP4-12C
McLaren F1
Ferrari Enzo
Ferrari 458 Italia
Nissan GT-R Nismo
Light Car Company Rocket
Alfa Romeo TZ3 Stradale
Nissan GT-R Black Edition
Ferrari F430 Scuderia
Nissan GT-R Spec V
McLaren is a good way ahead, and I begin to doubt they will be ever beaten by production cars on that combo. There's still a lot of supercars to try out, but I don't see which one could get in front of them. The Lambos seems to be too lively, and the American beasts will probably lack a bit of chassis to fill the 1.6 second gap between the Enzo and the F1. I expect more concepts and VGT cars in the global top 10 in the future.
The GT-Rs are invading the top spots, unsurprinsingly, but they're not as unbeatable as the legends would make you think. People usually don't keep in mind that not every car manufacturer gets serious on the Nurburgring battle.
McLaren runs on the Nordschleife, but they never reveal official lap times because they think the Nurburgring laptime war is meaningless and too dangerous, as there's no regulations around that, the conditions are changing each time, and can even be subject to variations on a single lap, and the drivers has to push too far. From unofficial sources that had access to the track or video, the F1 is said to have clocked it in 7'11 with Mika Hakkinen at the wheel, and the P1 is said to have made it in 6'47, for example. So I'm not surprised that the GT-R's get beaten.
Top 10 "cheated cars" :
Lotus Elise 111 R (S2) > +55
Lotus Elise Type 72 (S2) > +39
Ferrari Dino 246 GT > +36
Tommykaira ZZ-II > +35
Lotus Elise (S1) > +34
Amuse S2000 R1 > +34
Lotus Elise 111 S (S2) > +33
Volkswagen GTI Roadster VGT > +33
ASL Garaiya > +33
MG F > +30
The Lotus Elise is definitely a car that will secure you some easy wins in PP racing lobbies in most of its variations. They still have great acceleration for their PPs, unlike most light cars in the game which are usually very underpowered for the PP attributed by the game, and their cornering speeds are way ahead pretty much anything else. If some of them are a bit lively and requires you to be either wise or completely burned out and skilled, the 111R is just disgustingly easy to handle and even faster in corners than the others.
Though, the Garaiya beats it when it comes to ease : that thing is a blast to drive and will give you some confidence in it like no other car can do. No matter what you do with it, it seems like it will go off without any hint of troubles. It's a bit higher in PP in the game, though, and I think the 111R performs better in straight lines (I'll have to check this out), so that explains it's not as cheated.
The Dino is also definitely noticed for its superior handling in open lobbies, and its position here is not a surprise for me. It's definitely fun to drive, I personally appreciate it a lot, but it deserves to be run against 450 PP cars to be fair.
The ZZ-II, being a car built to need only some slick tires fitted to be homologated under FIA regulations, was also expected to be here. I don't really understand why the game doesn't allocates it more PPs.
The S2000 R1, being a tuner car based on something that will probably fit in that top in future updates, has definitely some arguments to be here, but it's not very easy, especially on bumpy tracks like Trial Mountain.
The MG F is the surprise from this top at the moment. It is definitely a great handling car, but I didn't suspected it would be faster than the TF160 at first ! It will go off the cheated top 10 as soon as I'll get my hands on the S2000 or NSX-R, but I'm still impressed.
About the VW VGT, this one may not be much representative : the only car being in +/- 1 second from it is the Citroën GT Concept, and that one has really huge PP figures because of the enormous torque it features (and also, it is so fast that it required nearly the whole session just to figure out decent braking points).
Flop 10 :
Buick Special "Bu'Wicked" > -94
Cizeta V16T > -67
Caterham Seven Fireblade > -59
Art Morrison Corvette > -55
Citroën GT Concept > -54
Lotus Carlton > -50
Tesla Model S Signature Performance > -46
AC Cobra 427 S/C > -42
Mini Marcos GT > -39
Lotus Elan S1 > -29
This one showcases most of GT6's PP system flaws : we have heavy cars with bad chassis, very light cars that are underpowered for their PPs and electric cars, with a torque-peak at their lower RPMs. And that's a pity, because the cars form the last two categories are actually very pleasant cars, with nice handling and great cornering speeds. I made several one-make races with the Cat' and the Marcos and both belong to the funniest cars in the whole game, and the Tesla is really surprinsingly good in corners.
On the other hand, we have cars with insane power, but they can't corner as fast as a Beetle. I actually like the Cobra, because I find it to remain quite fun, even though it is hugely challenging, but the Buick is just like having the Everest penetrating your ass. It understeers nearly as much as the Tank Car, but you don't have the fun side of it.
The Cizeta is just like a crappy Chinese-made Diablo fake. It doesn't look as good, and it handles like a soap on an ice rink.
Top 10 of my personal favorites so far :
Alpine A110 1600 S : my ultimate dream car. It is incredibly pleasing to drive. My father actually owned one in the 70's, before I was born. It is by far the car he regrets the most, and nearly half of his car stories he told me involves this car. Some famous French pro-drivers have a similar speech when it comes to the Alpine "Berlinette". If it handles in real life like it handles in the game, I understand why.
ASL Garaiya : I love the style, I love the handling, I love the fact it has just the power you'd need for my local roads, and I love the fact that it's an original alternative to the Elise, with a rare and underestimated engine (SR20VE). This car has actually a strange story in real life : you would order it with tailor-made supension configuration for your needs, and a bunch of people had already signed for it and were ready to go do some tests (or they already has sent their specifications, I can't remember well right now), when it was dismissed. They even already built some chassis, and to this date, I have yet to find proofs showing if some cars has actually been completed and sold or not, aside from the prototype car. I would kill to be able to buy one !
Peugeot 205 Turbo 16 : there's several personal stories behind this one, one of them being related in one of my previous messages in this topic. Also, the way it drives is something I'm really fond of... and who doesn't like homologated group B rally cars ?
Ferrari 288 GTO : who doesn't like homologated group B rally cars bis. The look, the power, the rawness... it is a bit challenging, and I like that, but it's also really rewarding.
Oullim Spirra Prototype : it's challenging, but can be really fast i the good hands. In fact, in my GT5 beginnings, none of my friends could handle it. Even my close real life friend I play with nearly every day, which has a very close pace to mine, crashed all the time wth that when he originally tried it. I made fun of him, of course, and he told me it was just impossible to drive. That instantly turned a switch in my brain . I HAD to try it, master it, and win a race with it in front of him. I did, on my first attempt, with a lot of sideways action and suicide brakings. Everyone calls me crazy since then.
AC Cobra 427 S/C : that car is way too powerfull for its chassis. But it's an old English roadster, fitted with a brutal American classic big block, and it is Carroll Shelby's greatest piece of art. I love to give all of myself driving this kind of cars. I usually don't care about what happens around me, the challenge is between the car and me, and that brought me some of my best moments on GT. So dangerous that it's always a thrill to survive it.
Ferrari 250 GT Berlinetta passo corto : a magnificent oldtimer with an outstanding beauty. The suspension is way too soft, and the differential is weird, but I really like driving it, it feels like an old car and it has this Targo Florio / Mille Miglia feeling in my mind when I use it... It's difficult to say why I appreciate so much driving it, but the fact is I often can't resist to have a blast with it when I come across it in the list.
Renault Clio 3 RS2 : front wheel drive is not my favorite layout usually, but the Clio RS has all the qualities you would look for on one of those to blast through mountain passes. It is nimble, precise, and the lift-off oversteer makes my shift knob hard. I even tried to replicate as close as possible the real life Clio Cup settings (I found all the data) for a championship, and it works really nicely, the car handles like a Clio Cup should.
Renault R5 Turbo : another famous Jean Ragnotti car. Another car which likes to slide, and can be really fast doing it. Also, it looks like the 205 T16's nemesis (though they didn't raced on the same years). If you already tried the previous cars I mentionned in my personal top 10, you'll understand why I love this one.
Mini Marcos GT : I think this car has been the subject of the most epic evenings I had on Gran Turismo. I'm cheating a little bit on this one because it is much more fun when tuned. When it is, this car becomes mentally challenged. Or maybe it is me, and the fools who dares to take part to events where half the points are allowed on the most epic trick of the race. You can throw it randomly into corners, taking huge drifting angles, weld the throttle to the floor, and it will get out of corners like a flower. A metal, spiked, cannibal and screaming one. Driving this car suddenly makes me want to fit 2 grades-lower tires on the rear and try to overtake my team mate by jumping over him while doing a 360 (I seriously tried that on a race).