23 | Motogp
Date: 2024 (Retrospective Analysis) Platforms: PC, PS5, PS4, Xbox Series X|S, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch Developer: Milestone S.r.l. Engine: Unreal Engine 4 1. Executive Summary: The Comeback Kid? By 2023, the annualized MotoGP franchise faced a familiar foe: stagnation. The 2022 iteration was criticized for a "stiff" physics model and a career mode that felt like a spreadsheet dressed in leather. Enter MotoGP 23 . This iteration did not reinvent the wheel—it redesigned the suspension.
| Feature | Implementation | Player Impact | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Rain falls on Turn 1 but not Turn 9. | Creates "damp line" strategy chaos. | | Flag-to-Flag | Pit entry required to swap bikes (Dry -> Wet). | AI pitting logic is flawed (too slow). Human players gain 5-10 seconds by pitting one lap early. | | Track Drying | Racing line dries first, off-line stays wet for 3 laps. | Forces players to run "off-line" to cool tires, risking a highside. | MotoGP 23
This is not a racing game. It is a simulated motorcycle physics exam . For controller users, it’s frustrating. For wheel + pedal + lean gear users (e.g., Thrustmaster T-GT), it is transcendent. 3. Dynamic Weather: The Great Equalizer Milestone finally implemented a proper weather system with track evolution. Date: 2024 (Retrospective Analysis) Platforms: PC, PS5, PS4,
MotoGP 23 is the Dark Souls of motorcycle games. It hates you, but it respects your ability to learn. The dynamic weather and flag-to-flag races finally bring the strategic depth of real MotoGP to the console, but the punishing front-tire physics and dead multiplayer lobbies outside peak hours prevent it from being a classic. It is an interesting failure in mass-market appeal—a niche simulator wearing a licensed sport’s clothing. By 2023, the annualized MotoGP franchise faced a
7.8/10
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