Grid 2 - Apr 2026

If you have a spare $10 on Steam or a dusty Xbox 360 copy in the attic, fire it up. The World Series is waiting.

Codemasters removed the cockpit camera entirely (a controversial move at the time) to push you closer to the action. The cars have a heavy, weighty slide to them. You don't brake for corners so much as you tame the car through them. It is slippery. It is chaotic. But once you learn to stop fighting the oversteer and start surfing it, the game becomes a symphony of controlled aggression. Forget a cheesy "from rags to riches" story. Grid 2 introduces you to the World Series Racing, a league designed to bring racing to the American market. You aren't just a driver; you are a brand. Grid 2 -

🏁 8/10 (Aged like fine wine... if that wine was a high-octane energy drink) Do you have fond memories of Grid 2, or were you part of the crowd that missed the cockpit view? Let me know in the comments below! If you have a spare $10 on Steam

The visuals have aged surprisingly well thanks to the EGO Engine. The sound design (the whine of the Nissan GT-R, the roar of the muscle cars) is still top-tier. And most importantly, the AI is aggressive without being psychic. They will spin you out, but they also make mistakes. Grid 2 sits in a weird spot in history. It isn't the best sim ever made, and it isn't the most extreme arcade racer. But it is arguably the best "simcade" gateway drug. The cars have a heavy, weighty slide to them

Does it hold up today? Let’s pop the hood. The headline feature of Grid 2 was the "TrueFeel" handling system. Sim racers hated it. Arcade fans adored it. The truth lies somewhere in the middle.

However, if you miss the days of Burnout Paradise or the original Need for Speed: Most Wanted , and you want something with a bit more weight and respect for racing lines—