Compare Automobilista prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Reiza Studios. Published by Reiza Studios. Released on 8/24/2016. Available on PC. Genres: Racing, Simulation, Sports.

Ninety percent of over 2,500 Steam reviewers approve, and after time behind the wheel across Brazilian stock cars, rental karts, and 800-HP single-seaters, it's easy to see why this one sticks.

I'll be straight with you: when I first loaded Automobilista and saw the heavy lean toward Brazilian motorsport content, I almost assumed it was a niche curio for locals only. Thirty hours later I was hooked, and that initial skepticism feels embarrassing. Reiza Studios built this as the spiritual successor to Stock Car Extreme, and the depth of what's here quietly sneaks up on you. The car roster is the real headline. You can go from piloting a Formula Vee learning the basics of weight transfer, all the way up to an 800-HP open-wheel beast inside a few menu clicks. In between sits Stock Car V8, Copa Petrobras de Marcas, Formula 3 Brasil, Rallycross EvoX, Supertrucks with actual ramp jumps, and endurance prototypes capable of full 24-hour stints. That breadth is genuinely unusual for a sim of this price. The physics engine runs at an upscaled 720 Hz update rate with 500 Hz input polling, which in practice means force-feedback wheels feel responsive and communicative in a way that cheaper sims can't match. Older cars with unsynchronized gearboxes demand proper clutch work or rev-matched shifts; modern machinery asks you to manage traction control and aero. Dynamic track conditions build up rubber on the racing line and scatter marbles offline as a race progresses, so what the track feels like on lap one is genuinely different from lap thirty. For wheel-and-pedal players this is a comfortable home. Logitech G-series, Thrustmaster, Fanatec, and most DirectInput wheels work without major headaches, and the force feedback is a cut above many similarly priced sims. Gamepad players are not locked out, though the lack of any split-screen mode means Automobilista is firmly a solo or online experience rather than a couch co-op night. If your Saturday tournament involves four friends on one TV, this is not that game. Online multiplayer exists but the community around the original Automobilista is modest compared to newer titles, so populated lobbies can be hit or miss depending on the time of day. The modding scene picks up the slack here: the Race Department community has built a massive track pack that drops straight into the Locations folder, effectively tripling what ships in the box. The weaknesses worth naming honestly: the UI is functional rather than inviting, and newcomers to sim racing will find Automobilista less hand-holding than something like Gran Turismo or Forza. There is no rain, which is a genuine omission for a sim at this level. Visuals are dated by 2024 standards, and the AI, while it makes believably organic errors like traction-loss slides rather than robotic perfection, can still behave oddly in tight situations. If you want polished presentation and a guided career mode, look elsewhere. What Automobilista does give you is a rare sim with unusual integrity: a developer that clearly loves the sport, a physics foundation that rewards learning, and a content catalogue you genuinely will not exhaust quickly. For a wheel owner who has already toured the more mainstream sims and wants something that celebrates corners of motorsport history that other games ignore entirely, this is a very solid pickup. Casual or party players should look at Automobilista 2 instead, which layers in more accessibility and weather systems. But the original holds its own. Riley, Scout Team

Automobilista
RacingSimulationSports

Automobilista

Aug 24, 2016Reiza Studios
GamerScout Says

Ninety percent of over 2,500 Steam reviewers approve, and after time behind the wheel across Brazilian stock cars, rental karts, and 800-HP single-seaters, it's easy to see why this one sticks.

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About Automobilista

I'll be straight with you: when I first loaded Automobilista and saw the heavy lean toward Brazilian motorsport content, I almost assumed it was a niche curio for locals only. Thirty hours later I was hooked, and that initial skepticism feels embarrassing. Reiza Studios built this as the spiritual successor to Stock Car Extreme, and the depth of what's here quietly sneaks up on you. The car roster is the real headline. You can go from piloting a Formula Vee learning the basics of weight transfer, all the way up to an 800-HP open-wheel beast inside a few menu clicks. In between sits Stock Car V8, Copa Petrobras de Marcas, Formula 3 Brasil, Rallycross EvoX, Supertrucks with actual ramp jumps, and endurance prototypes capable of full 24-hour stints. That breadth is genuinely unusual for a sim of this price. The physics engine runs at an upscaled 720 Hz update rate with 500 Hz input polling, which in practice means force-feedback wheels feel responsive and communicative in a way that cheaper sims can't match. Older cars with unsynchronized gearboxes demand proper clutch work or rev-matched shifts; modern machinery asks you to manage traction control and aero. Dynamic track conditions build up rubber on the racing line and scatter marbles offline as a race progresses, so what the track feels like on lap one is genuinely different from lap thirty. For wheel-and-pedal players this is a comfortable home. Logitech G-series, Thrustmaster, Fanatec, and most DirectInput wheels work without major headaches, and the force feedback is a cut above many similarly priced sims. Gamepad players are not locked out, though the lack of any split-screen mode means Automobilista is firmly a solo or online experience rather than a couch co-op night. If your Saturday tournament involves four friends on one TV, this is not that game. Online multiplayer exists but the community around the original Automobilista is modest compared to newer titles, so populated lobbies can be hit or miss depending on the time of day. The modding scene picks up the slack here: the Race Department community has built a massive track pack that drops straight into the Locations folder, effectively tripling what ships in the box. The weaknesses worth naming honestly: the UI is functional rather than inviting, and newcomers to sim racing will find Automobilista less hand-holding than something like Gran Turismo or Forza. There is no rain, which is a genuine omission for a sim at this level. Visuals are dated by 2024 standards, and the AI, while it makes believably organic errors like traction-loss slides rather than robotic perfection, can still behave oddly in tight situations. If you want polished presentation and a guided career mode, look elsewhere. What Automobilista does give you is a rare sim with unusual integrity: a developer that clearly loves the sport, a physics foundation that rewards learning, and a content catalogue you genuinely will not exhaust quickly. For a wheel owner who has already toured the more mainstream sims and wants something that celebrates corners of motorsport history that other games ignore entirely, this is a very solid pickup. Casual or party players should look at Automobilista 2 instead, which layers in more accessibility and weather systems. But the original holds its own. Riley, Scout Team

Tags

steamForce Feedback OptimisedBrazilian MotorsportDynamic Track ConditionsEndurance RacingPhysics-First SimMod FriendlyNo Split-ScreenWheel Required for Best ExperienceHistoric RacingAI Racing

System Requirements

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
90%(2,564)

Game Info

Developer
Reiza Studios
Publisher
Reiza Studios
Release Date
Aug 24, 2016

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