Compare WRC 10 FIA World Rally Championship Steam Key prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by KT Racing. Published by Nacon. Released on 9/2/2021. Available on PC, Xbox, Nintendo Switch. Genres: Racing, Simulation, Sports.

A proper rally sim that rewards patience and punishes overconfidence, best-in-class stage design, but casual players will eat gravel before they see a podium.

I've spent enough time with rally games to know when a studio is padding versus when it's genuinely building something. WRC 10 sits somewhere uncomfortably between those two things, and that tension is exactly what makes it worth discussing before you spend your money. On the driving itself, KT Racing made real progress here. The physics push further toward simulation than the series had managed before, with tire wear now playing a much more meaningful role across a stage, you actually feel the shift from asphalt to gravel through how the car loads and unloads on corners. Braking is unforgiving in the best way: carry too much speed into a hairpin and you're either in the barrier or adding seconds you'll never claw back. Wheel and pedal players using hardware like a Thrustmaster T300RS or a Logitech G25 will get decent recognition and configuration, though some reviewers flagged that force feedback lacks the nuance of competing titles. Gamepad players are arguably better served here than sim-wheel users, the controller response is tighter, even if you lose some of the tactile feel you'd want from a proper rally rig. Content-wise, this might be the most stacked official WRC game KT Racing ever shipped. The career mode runs deep, you start at the WRC Junior or WRC3 level and work up through team management, staff hiring, sponsorship deals, and tire allocation decisions before each stage. There's a livery editor for building your own team identity and a Quick Play mode for when you just want to pick a car and throw it at Estonia or Croatia without reading a spreadsheet. The 50th Anniversary Mode adds 20 legendary cars across 6 historic locations, Group B monsters, Lancia Deltas, Audi Quattros, but in practice it reduces to glorified time trials with fixed car condition, no difficulty scaling, and a frustrating quirk where it locks the private team career feature behind completion. That content-lock annoyed a lot of players, and rightly so. Multiplayer covers online races, Clubs, community challenges, eSports WRC season integration, and split-screen, which covers the couch crowd at least partially, though rally split-screen is more of a take-turns situation than a chaotic four-player party game. For newcomers, the accessibility gap is real. There is no rewind system, the anniversary events have fixed hard time requirements regardless of your difficulty setting, and career mode forces you to begin at the bottom with no option to skip the junior ranks. Casual players who bounce off the default settings without adjusting assists will have a rough first few hours. The PC version specifically landed a mixed Steam reception, partly due to reported bugs and crashes in career mode post-launch, and visuals that critics described as functional rather than impressive. If you've already put time into WRC 9 and you're weighing up whether to step across, the honest answer is that this is a refinement, not a reinvention, better tire physics, a richer car list, a deeper career, but the same structural skeleton underneath. Riley, Scout Team

WRC 10 FIA World Rally Championship Steam Key
RacingSimulationSports

WRC 10 FIA World Rally Championship Steam Key

Sep 2, 2021KT RacingNacon
GamerScout Says

A proper rally sim that rewards patience and punishes overconfidence, best-in-class stage design, but casual players will eat gravel before they see a podium.

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About WRC 10 FIA World Rally Championship Steam Key

I've spent enough time with rally games to know when a studio is padding versus when it's genuinely building something. WRC 10 sits somewhere uncomfortably between those two things, and that tension is exactly what makes it worth discussing before you spend your money. On the driving itself, KT Racing made real progress here. The physics push further toward simulation than the series had managed before, with tire wear now playing a much more meaningful role across a stage, you actually feel the shift from asphalt to gravel through how the car loads and unloads on corners. Braking is unforgiving in the best way: carry too much speed into a hairpin and you're either in the barrier or adding seconds you'll never claw back. Wheel and pedal players using hardware like a Thrustmaster T300RS or a Logitech G25 will get decent recognition and configuration, though some reviewers flagged that force feedback lacks the nuance of competing titles. Gamepad players are arguably better served here than sim-wheel users, the controller response is tighter, even if you lose some of the tactile feel you'd want from a proper rally rig. Content-wise, this might be the most stacked official WRC game KT Racing ever shipped. The career mode runs deep, you start at the WRC Junior or WRC3 level and work up through team management, staff hiring, sponsorship deals, and tire allocation decisions before each stage. There's a livery editor for building your own team identity and a Quick Play mode for when you just want to pick a car and throw it at Estonia or Croatia without reading a spreadsheet. The 50th Anniversary Mode adds 20 legendary cars across 6 historic locations, Group B monsters, Lancia Deltas, Audi Quattros, but in practice it reduces to glorified time trials with fixed car condition, no difficulty scaling, and a frustrating quirk where it locks the private team career feature behind completion. That content-lock annoyed a lot of players, and rightly so. Multiplayer covers online races, Clubs, community challenges, eSports WRC season integration, and split-screen, which covers the couch crowd at least partially, though rally split-screen is more of a take-turns situation than a chaotic four-player party game. For newcomers, the accessibility gap is real. There is no rewind system, the anniversary events have fixed hard time requirements regardless of your difficulty setting, and career mode forces you to begin at the bottom with no option to skip the junior ranks. Casual players who bounce off the default settings without adjusting assists will have a rough first few hours. The PC version specifically landed a mixed Steam reception, partly due to reported bugs and crashes in career mode post-launch, and visuals that critics described as functional rather than impressive. If you've already put time into WRC 9 and you're weighing up whether to step across, the honest answer is that this is a refinement, not a reinvention, better tire physics, a richer car list, a deeper career, but the same structural skeleton underneath. Riley, Scout Team

Tags

steamRally SimCareer ManagementTire StrategyWheel & Pedal SupportSplit-ScreenHistoric CarsStage RacingeSports ModeLivery Editor

System Requirements

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
72%(3,580)

Game Info

Developer
KT Racing
Publisher
Nacon
Release Date
Sep 2, 2021

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