V-Rally 4 is Special: Difference between revisions

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<Youtube>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X_245AruKUc</Youtube>
<Youtube>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X_245AruKUc</Youtube>
This guy has 20+ hours in the game and you can get his enthusiasm and joy playing the game:
<Youtube>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_zo0gO1Dhvk</Youtube>

Revision as of 20:51, 7 July 2024


V-Rally 4

V-Rally 4 is a 2018 mixed-discipline rally and off-roading focused game by French developer Kylotonn, now working on the much anticipated open world racing game, Test Drive Unlimited Solar Crown. In 2024, V-Rally 4 captured the peak of an era of video games before photo-realistic Unreal Engine look-alike games started to dominate. V-Rally 4 gives me Driveclub-but-rally vibes and that's a compliment as Driveclub is a beautiful, creative, rich game, itself. I think V-Rally 4 is a true hidden gem.

Launch Trailer

Fun, Rich, Bright, Vibrant

The game captures a fun atmosphere of richly designed locations with bright, vibrant colours, and deep pallettes, overlaid with a beautifully dynamic lighting system. Locations include expansive tarmac, gravel, dirt, mud, snow, and even water and river track components. Each location has a unique vibe to it. Kenya is evokes a Far Cry 2 vibe. Japan evokes the classic Japanese lakeshide town, narrow streets and alleyways, lush countryside, and twisting mountain roads.

You'll experience all kinds of weather, at different times of day and night, in all kinds of climates from moderate Europoean, to jungle Kenya, to scorching US, to freezing Siberia, including rain, snow, smoke, dust, fog, God rays and more elements that all come together in an incredibly tight artistic presentation.

Lighting is a bright spot (pun intended). I don't know if they're using global illumination but whatever they're doing it's working. The lighting works so well that it gives you the "feel" of the mood and even the temperature, wetness, or mugginess of a day. Night driving is especially engrossing as lamps, houses, buildings, headlights, camera flashes, spotlights, and other sources start to light up. Up on the mountains surrounding the Japanese location, you'll get glimpses of the town below all lit up like you would expect.

Environment interactivity is another positive. You'll be hitting posts, ribbons, signs, fences, plants, and water, and they all interact in some way from smashing fences, ripping ribbons, and running down signs that roll around on your hood for a while. In stormy weather, trees and bushes will swing and swear dramatically. All of the moving and interactive elements serve to heighten the immersive experience.

An Open World Racing Game in Disguise

What really began to strike me was the location design. V-Rally 4 doesn't present itself as an open world racing game but, after playing small segments or variations of each location as you progressively level, you begin to get the sense that you're returning to a single location and not a "level". You get the sense that all the smaller rally segments, rally cross variations, and buggy, hillclimb, and extreme Khana track variations, all really exist in a real place and the organizers have just blocked off roads or rerouted parts of the track to create new circuit variants.

There's an old video game developer tale about N64's GoldenEye level design: They started out with design real places, with real structures that first served real-world purposes and then designed a way to move through those locations in the video game. The levels have a believable feel. That's the sense I get from V-Rally 4's locations. And I don't think it's a coincidence Kylotonn has gone on develop Test Drive Unlimited Solar Crown, an open world racing game. They have demonstrated a knack for creating believable racing locales.

One specific example is the location in Japan. Race it enough and you'll begin to see that it feels like they've created an entire small town, complete with a lake, mountain, hills, fields, waterfront roads, narrow streets, back alleys, houses, businesses, walking paths, train tracks, and then they added a lush hilly country, a bamboo forest, and mountainous roads for hillclimb and drifting styles. It's remarkable to experience.

You only start to realize the extend of what they're really pulled off here if you go deep in the game. It's worth it.

Precedurally Generated Circuits for Endless Novelty

I've just learned that V-Rally 4 uses procedural generation to stitch together segments of a locations roads, tracks, joker laps, etc. to create new, unique experiences almost every time you go to a location. This had, apparently, been done before in the Dirt series(?) but people disliked it there because it was "barren" and didn't exemplify the handcrafted experience of the main tracks. V-Rally 4, on the other hand, takes the same handcrafted tracks and almost imperceptibly adjusts them with road blocks, hail bails, fenceses, and ribbon to direct you along new routes.

I guess this is why, after 45h, I'm still experiencing new track variations.

Locations that are Large, Deep, and Complex

When you first start it might feel like there are only a few locations, and some locations support only a subset of disciplines, but each location is beautifully crafted, and contains many variations that makes returning always interested even much later and deeper into the game.

There are 15 unique locations and each location has one or more disciplines available.

The locations include:

  • Bolivia
  • Cape Town
  • China
  • Detroit
  • Driving Test (Canada)
  • England
  • Japan
  • Kenya
  • Malaysia
  • Monument Valley (US)
  • Mount Rainier (US)
  • Nellis Air Force Base (US)
  • Niger
  • Romania
  • Sequoia National Park
  • Siberia

Here's the full list of locations and their disciplines from the V-Rally 4 Fandom wiki:

  • Bolivia (Buggy)
  • Cape Town (Extreme-Khana)
  • China (Hillclimb)
  • China (V-Rally Cross)
  • Detroit (Extreme-Khana)
  • Driving Test
  • England (V-Rally Cross)
  • Japan (Rally)
  • Japan (V-Rally Cross)
  • Kenya (Buggy)
  • Kenya (Rally)
  • Malaysia (Rally)
  • Monument Valley (Buggy)
  • Monument Valley (Rally)
  • Mount Rainier (Hillclimb)
  • Mount Rainier (V-Rally Cross)
  • Nellis Air Force Base (Extreme-Khana)
  • Niger (Extreme-Khana)
  • Romania (Hillclimb)
  • Romania (V-Rally Cross)
  • Sequoia National Park (Rally)
  • Siberia (Buggy)
  • Siberia (Rally)

Game Mechanics

V-Rally 4 includes quick races and career modes and the career includes quasi-simulation gaming mechanics like hiring engineers and mechanics that accelerate research and development that allow you to upgrade your car's parts and specs. Upgrade your team and you upgrade how fast your car upgrades complete. It really does help to create a more enjoyable, immersive experience.

Rewarding Difficulty Levels

The AI difficulty level is easy to grasp at first but contains depth with a multi-faceted approach to how it's applied. Events are scored by stars, 1 to 3 stars, and a championships. You might breeze through 1 Star events at max AI (100%) but on 3 Stars or a Championship, it becomes much more difficult, and that's great, that's how it should be. Lower the AI difficulty and try again. It's far more rewarding than winning every event, every time by 30 seconds.

But V-Rally 4 rewards you for taking the risk of raising your AI difficulty level: You get rewarded up to 25% more money from events. That doesn't seem like much for small 1 Star events with a $10,000 payout but it becomes significant when you're talking about a $50,000 bonus on $200,000 events.

Drawbacks

There are some drawbacks. The steering is a little twitchy and will likely be a frustration point until you dial in your controller settings. I have tuned a PS5 DualShock 4 controller to my liking on the V-Rally_4 page which you might find valuable. The graphics are beautiful, immersive, and engaging, but they are a generation behind (the good news is it's a solid 60fps experience). Online multiplayer mode is no longer supported.

There are few 4WD/AWD cars which make rally much more approachable. You start out with FWD cars, like most rally games do, and that's a good place to start, as they make rally approachable by giving the driver a way to "pull" the car around corners instead of having to learn to steer-by-throttle pushing the backend out through corners. On the flip side, the progression levels encourage you to learn RWD cars early and car upgrades make it engaging to keep trying. I always find RWD rally cars extremely challenging on a controller but V-Rally 4 was engaging enough to make me want to master them.

At first, it will feel like there are only a few locations and you'll feel like you keep repeating them but you'll soon realize that while you're repeating locations you're experiencing them in significantly different ways through track variations. I am deep into the game and I'm still not repeating the exact same track variations as when I started. I'm certainly repeating "sections" of tracks but that's a good thing, it helps you learn in small chunks and then you get to string them altogether in a longer variation. Every discipline's tracks have many variants with sections blocked off to create new routes. V-Rally courses have Joker laps and even these are changed up when you come back later.

These drawbacks are barely worth mentioning except in the real experience of the game but it's valuable to know that each drawback has a positive side to it.

Some Notes On My Experience

I play in cockpit view which I feel enhances the immersion and excitement of racing. If you're seeing chase cam videos on YouTube, and wondering why I'm so into this game, cockpit view may be part of it.

I started in campaign mode and haven't even touched Quick Play mode yet. Campaign mode starts you off easy, with slower but more approachable cars. You are then guided through how to earn more, research and develop upgrades, and then buy those upgrades for your cars. This was how I learned the game and it may have helped give me a positive reception over just diving in the deep end of Quick Play mode.

I saw a video recently of a guy who was proud to have put 21 hours of gameplay into V-Rally 4 and he loved it and knew it really deeply. I just checked and realized I've put in 45 hours over a few months. I had no idea I had put in that much. It's a testament to how good and engrossing the game is.

Conclusion

I am deeply impressed with V-Rally 4 and find a lot of joy in finding an older, cheaper game, with all the extras now bundled in an "Ultimate Edition" that is a true hidden gem.

More Resources

Tips

  • Restart the first race of a multi-round event to adjust your AI level if you find during the race that you're too far behind. You won't be able to adjust the AI level after the first round.
  • AI Level Cheatsheet for average but experienced drivers:
    • 1 Star Event: 100% (125% Prize)
    • 2 Star Event: 100% (125% Prize)
    • 3 Star Event: 75% (112% Prize)
    • Championship Event: 55% (105% Prize)

People Are Giving V-Rally 4 A Second Look

Finally, check out some recent reviews. People trying it out in 2024 are having much more positive experiences than they did when the game was released.

Here's one from 2024: "It's been a blast, I don't know what all the hate's about."

This guy has 20+ hours in the game and you can get his enthusiasm and joy playing the game: