How many of you (if anyone) would love an open world driving game. One with 100s of detailed cars from cockpit in and out. Where the only purpose is to cruise around. No story, no championship just driving for the joy of it. You could see in detail both classic and modern cars.
Would this be pointless to you ? Would this just get boring to you ?
Personally I love just staring at car photos online of new cars released. And I think it be pure joy just to hop into a game and enjoy them virtually while cruising a scenic landscape.
Just curious if anyone else thinks this sounds like a good idea …
As someone else said, you can do this in Forza horizon. Make a custom car, tune it yourself, then rip around the map blasting music.
Yea the car aspect exists in gaming. Like how old is Midnight Club now?
What we need is Microsoft Flight simulator levels of real world immersion. Need to capture the feeling of a “road trip” or “Sunday cruise”.
The Long Drive perfectly captures long desert roadrtrip vibe with some surrealness thrown in.
I love it
Yea? I’m not on PC and apparently the console version isn’t the same.
How in depth is the car customization?
Sounds like we just need 2 different game studios to marry and make the ultimate car baby.
Basically unlimited car customization. Can put any part on any car. Bus diesel in a golf? Sure. Golf 4 cylinder in a Plymouth fury? OK.
Mods take it even further.
I very often just drive around in Forza Horizon listening to my own music, so another game like that would be fun sometimes if the driving model was good and the map was good and detailed. But I also like to spend time on races and challenges in Forza Horizon, that option is very nice. So I think driving only with no goals would get boring.
I actually sometimes used to do this in cyberpunk, just kinda cruise round night city. I think there are lots of games that allow you to do this sort of thing.
This sounds like the Train Simulator of driving games, which I’m sure there’s a market for. I think it could have more mass appeal without compromising the vision if you included a set of in-game goals like visiting various landmarks, obeying (or disobeying) road rules, or whatever else.
Thees mods for Truck Sim. I’m pretty sure the devs have been working on cars and RVs too.
I’d be interested, I just drive around in BeamNG quite often. I think having traffic would definitely increase replay value, but I understand if that’s outside the scope of the game.
You can enable traffic in BeamNG.
I know, I mean in OP’s hypothetical game.
This is the sort of thing that sounds like it wouldn’t work until you realize that it’s literally Microsoft Flight Simulator, but with cars instead of planes.
Here’s a fun fact about Flight Simulator. Years back I used to work in a computer store, and we’d do custom builds. My best sales, by far, were always to the smartly dressed guys in their late forties who came in looking for a gaming PC. You’d ask what kind of games they play, and they’d tell you “Just Flight Simulator.” They really meant it. They were building a gaming rig for one game. And then they would drop the most heinous stack of cash to build a gaming rig that would make the gods weep in envy. Massive towers with double or triple GPU, maxed out RAM, best CPU on the market. Liquid cooled? Sure, fuck it, why not. Their parents built model trains. These guys had Flight Simulator.
As a franchise, that game has 22 million sales. The Forza franchise has 16 million.
All of which is to say that I do think there’s a missed opportunity here. I hate racing games, but I’d play an open world driving game and I know at least one friend who would play it with me. Cruise down a mountainside in Italy, navigating hairpin bends with the hammer down and a beautiful sunset in the distance? Yeah, fuck it, sign me up.
Would American Truck Simulator scratch that itch? There’s an american muscle cars DLC coming soon, but its a) not all states, and b) limited cities. (Maybe 1/2 blocks per city)
Just so everyone knows where I’m coming from, I do not enjoy racing games. I like being able to drive in games like GTA, but the racing missions are the worst part of those games.
That being said, I’ve always thought it would be neat to have a driving game with accurate real world cities.
You could just explore the open road, or maybe do a test run if you need to drive in a city you are unfamiliar with, or just drive like a maniac through your hometown doing all the things that would otherwise get you arrested.
I already have BeamNG so I don’t really need anything else
It would be pointless and boring to me. I bore of BeamNG rather quickly, as there aren’t things to do, and it has some of the best physics in the industry.
There isn’t a game exactly like you’re describing, but I get the same vibes from various other games, depending what I’m feeling like.
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FH series for all the real cars, good arcade physics.
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BeamNG for sandbox, tuning, and (of course) wrecking cars.
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ATS/ETS2 for cruising
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This is nice as the truck/trailer provides an added challenge, as compared to cruising in a car.
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I’ll also mention that ATS is planning a DLC for just driving cars.
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Those are all games that have a strong focus on just driving around in beautiful sceneries with varying levels of minimal objectives. I don’t think any studio would be able to have as many cars as Forza, the physics of BeamNG, or the map size/quality of ATS/ETS2. Not that I’d hate to be proved wrong, but it would definitely not be an easy or cheap game to create.
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it’s got more simplistic graphics and isn’t exactly what you’re looking for, but MotorTown is kinda trying to do this. regular big free updates and made originally by a single guy. lots of love in it. I’m big into sims and was surprised how quickly I was hooked by it
Isn’t this more or less what Truck Simulator is? I find the idea interesting, but I’d want some sort of goal. I could be really obtuse and say that Grand Theft Auto 5 is an open world driving game lol.
I like open world games. They get a bad rap because a lot of games that are sort of samey and sloppy use open world aspects, but I don’t think the open world aspect is the problem.
No sounds boring af
Yet it would be pointless and yes it would get boring. Pointless it can get away with easily enough, but boring, never.
In GTA and even NFS open world games, players would sometimes play by the npc traffic rules. It’s fun and different, in small amounts. But making a whole game about it? Rockstar’s betting on Roblox style development for GTA6. Which means someone’s bound to make a mod for that game doing exactly what you want, but with the foundation already built.
It’s an uneven competition.So to succeed, this kind of game has to have its own shtick. To make it not boring. A way of showing off perhaps?
Reactions to activities, which reflect a form of growth or change.The appeal is the cars. Like this kind of game is more for train simulator people than GTA types.
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Buying new car costs insurance which is determined by length of gameplay without accidents.
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In depth paint / decal system. like track pad airbrush custom decal drawing.
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In depth engine / body mod system that’s reasonably accurate to real life.
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Replica open world with real life landmarks and achievements for visiting them all. Like Sea to Sky Highway BC, Romanic Road Germany, Great Ocean Road Australia
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In game events like group cruises, car shows, drag racing etc
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A library of classic to modern cars from all over the world that you can collect and enjoy.
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In game currency earning from jobs like taxi, racing, or maybe even best car competitions where players determine the winner.
Like go to a car show and see what tickles those people. If you make a game that authentically lets them enjoy cars… you got 'em. Makes me think about my old ass grandpa playing Deer Hunter on his Windows 98 PC because he was too old to go in the bush.
All good and interesting ideas, the implementation though looks like a headache.
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This sounds pretty similar to what I did back in Test Drive Unlimited, specifically the first one not the second. TDU2 might also be able to do the same thing but my brother sold my copy before I could form much of an opinion on the game. I saw one other person in the comments mention TDU2 but saying that they have “racing games like TDU2”, so it seems like they didn’t get the same experience I enjoyed out of TDU1.
The main similarities I see are that in TDU1 you had very pretty cars on a very pretty island with a large number of roads to go up, down, over, and between. The roads were a means to facilitate races and other missions as much as they were there to allow free roam. Missions and races could only be started if you had found their start point during free roam and you could teleport to any part of any road you’ve previously traveled on.
The total quantity of roads you’ve driven down is also a metric that the game tracks and offers an achievement for 100% completion. The game’s minimap would also show untraveled roads as grey and traveled ones as blue so you could always just roam about and try to find new little roads and sections that you previously missed.
The progression of the game was through the missions and races which got you money, but free roam is easily the mode that I spent the most time in. Also you’ll note I keep saying missions and races. I no longer remember most of the mission types but I do remember there were a few and they were markedly different from being races with extra steps/restrictions. The primary one I remember was delivery missions where in game characters would hire you to deliver their vehicles, then you’d get money based on the value of the car and it’s condition by the end of the delivery.
If memory serves then you would also get a 50% bonus to your paycheck if the vehicle made it to the end without going off-road and without a single scratch. I specifically remember these missions not being repeatable meaning that any money you could earn from them was one-time and if you didn’t earn the bonuses then you wouldn’t get a chance to earn that money again. Most of the time that wasn’t too bad, but considering some of the missions were fairly high value for the early game, it (especially then) was pretty beneficial to be very gentle with those delivery missions so you can buy your first few cars.
The experience you’re describing reminds me of what I most valued out of TDU1, being able to just explore around a large world while driving in nice cars. That being said from what I understand your idea wouldn’t have much in the way of progression. For me, I don’t think I would have started exploring the world had there not been an in game incentive to do so. There were plenty of times I was exploring just for the sake of exploring (like the many times I went riding through the countryside off road, or tried to ride a ramp into the airports), but I’d still say the vast majority of the times I was exploring it was for that sense of progress I got from finding more roads I hadn’t yet traveled, finding more missions to complete, and trying to earn that 100% completion achievement.
If at least some of those aren’t in your hypothetical game I’m not certain I would get much out of the experience other than a pretty world existing for the sake of being a pretty world. And perhaps that would be enough for some people, but I don’t think I’d get much out of the experience.
I probably wouldn’t play it considering other racing game offerings.
I am an avid racing game player. I enjoy both sim and arcade racers. Test Drive Unlimited 2, Forza Horizon, Need for Speed Underground 2, Midnight Club LA, etc all offer a free roam driving portion of the game. But they keep my interest because of the racing part. Driving just to drive is fun in real life (when I can afford the gas) but in a video game I would rather be doing something I cannot or would not do in real life. Street racing, for example. The mechanical skill of mastering how each car drives, and the expression of that skill in a race, is part if the enjoyment of the game. Without it, the game would need other mechanics to hold my interest, such as The Long Drive, which has driving in it but has other mechanics as well.








