
Flying past at 4K and a consistent 60 frames per second (those moments of frame rate slowing have been eliminated), the roads are more detailed, the immediate surroundings are crisper and the wider world is far more visually appealing.


The rally stages have received a massive improvement too. The rally cars aren’t the only things to see a visual spitshine on PS5. These vehicles really sparkle in the 4K resolution. The attention to detail, explorable via the car viewer that lets the player explore every nook and cranny, is bordering on excessive. The car models were already gorgeous on the previous generation of this game but on PS5, they’re simply stunning.
#Wrc 10 review ps5 Ps4#
Where the PS5 version accelerates past the PS4 version of WRC 9 is the presentation and visuals. The handling and road feel in this game is equally as impressive on PS4 or PS5, forming a twitchy battle between the player and the road ahead that’s a joy to experience. If there’s one thing I hoped hadn’t changed between generational versions, it was this. The handling, mechanics and feel to drive the WRC Junior, main proper, classic and bonus cars remains completely unchanged in the PS5 version of WRC 9 – and that’s a good thing. You pick your event and you’re in the driver’s seat within seconds. I didn’t even notice any clever tricks to hide loading screens either. You spend a much higher proportion of your game time with WRC 9 on PS5 actually driving a car rather than looking at load screens. What I will say is that while the career mode still lacks a little personality, it’s much more palatable in the next-gen version of the game because load screens are virtually non-existent. I won’t go over the content included within WRC 9 again (if you want to read about that feel free to read my original review) because it remains completely unchanged in the PS5 version. WRC 9 on PS5 looks almost indistinguishable from the PlayStation 4 version and it makes brilliant use of the DualSense controller, achieving things that just weren’t possible on the previous generation of consoles. Those rough edges have mostly been polished into extinction.
