WRC 6: FIA World Rally Championship Key
The most accessible rally game with an official FIA license, split-screen couch play, and 14 real-world locations - held back by performance hiccups and a handling model that sits awkwardly between sim and arcade.
Compare Prices(0 stores)
Loading prices...
We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.
Screenshots & Media

About WRC 6: FIA World Rally Championship Key
My Saturday night co-op test has a simple rule: if I can hand a controller to someone who last played a driving game in 2009 and they're having fun within twenty minutes, the game passes. WRC 6 passes - barely, but it passes. Kylotonn's second crack at the official WRC license is a genuine improvement over WRC 5 across almost every dimension. The handling model lands somewhere between sim-cade territory: it asks you to be delicate with your inputs and respect the weight of a proper rally car, but it won't punish you the way DiRT Rally does when you miss a hairpin by three feet. A quick intro assessment reads your driving and recommends an assist level, which is a smart onboarding idea even if getting dropped cold into a stage before you've warmed up feels a bit rough. The good news is that you can adjust every assist setting from the main menu at any time, so there's no shame in dialing things in until the car feels right. Fourteen countries from the full 2016 WRC calendar are here - Monte Carlo, Finland, Germany, Wales, Australia and even the newly added Rally China among them - each with multiple weather states and time-of-day variations. Some countries have only three stages while others run five, which means certain championship rounds fly by faster than you'd want, but the longer endurance stages that stretch out to six or eight minutes are where the game really earns its keep. Night racing with headlights cutting through a forest is genuinely atmospheric, and the particle and dust effects are some of the best in any rally game from this era. For couch play, WRC 6 is arguably the only sensible option in its release window. Split-screen local multiplayer returned to the series here for the first time in years, and it holds up visually without obvious frame-rate sacrifice in that mode. Hot Seat lets up to eight players take turns on the same stage, which is exactly the right energy for a group session. Career mode gives you a proper ladder to climb: start in Junior WRC, earn better contracts, work up through WRC 2, and eventually compete in the full championship. The team morale mechanic - where your performances affect your crew's output over time - is a small but pleasant detail. Car setup goes reasonably deep too, covering suspension springs, damper compression and rebound, anti-roll bars, differential calibration, and brake bias. On the downside, the game carries a few frustrations that keep it from being a clean recommendation. Frame-rate issues and screen tearing were documented at launch and remain part of the PC conversation among Steam reviewers. Collision detection with roadside objects like Armco and portable fencing is inconsistent - glancing blows that should be minor sometimes kill your momentum completely. The co-driver call system, while authentic to real rally, is poorly introduced and can feel confusing until you spend time learning the note shorthand. There's also no free-roam or sandbox mode for players who just want to mess around, and since each car races alone against the clock you never get the direct wheel-to-wheel chaos that less simulation-minded players might crave. Wheel support had documented issues at launch too, so if you're running a less common force-feedback setup, check compatibility before buying. At this point in the series timeline, WRC 6 is a dated entry - later iterations refined the formula considerably - but at a reduced price it still delivers a legitimate rally experience with a depth of official content that casual fans of the sport will appreciate. If your group has been hunting for a split-screen rally game that won't immediately destroy newcomers, this is genuinely one of the few options that fits the brief. Riley, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Reviews & Ratings
Game Info
- Developer
- KT Racing
- Publisher
- Bigben Interactive
- Release Date
- Oct 7, 2016