Compare WRC 8: FIA World Rally Championship Key prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by KT Racing. Published by Bigben Interactive. Released on 9/8/2020. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Racing, Simulation, Sports. Metacritic score: 77/100.

Closer to a proper rally sim than its reputation suggests, with a meaty career mode and over 100 stages across 14 countries, but the thin online suite and Steam's mixed score tell a story worth reading before you click buy.

I've put time into enough rally titles to know when a studio has genuinely levelled up, and KT Racing's fourth crack at the WRC licence is one of those moments. The career mode alone is a significant departure from the series' workmanlike past: you start in the Junior WRC bracket, manage a calendar, recruit staff, rotate mechanics to prevent fatigue, and pump experience points into a four-branch R&D tree covering Team, Crew, Performance, and Reliability. That is a lot of menus for what is, at its core, a game about sliding a car sideways through a forest. Whether that sounds like fun or homework will tell you everything about whether WRC 8 is for you. On the stages themselves, the driving sits in an interesting middle ground. It is more forgiving than DiRT Rally 2.0 but still absolutely punishing if you treat it like an arcade racer, forget handbrake turns entirely, they will launch you off a cliff faster than you can blame the co-driver. The dynamic weather system is the headline feature and it earns that billing: you can start a stage in dry conditions and, partway through, get hit by a downpour that completely changes how your car behaves under braking. Rain-soaked tarmac in the German stages, snow-bound hairpins in Sweden, the red gravel of Chile, all 14 rally locations from the 2019 season are here, spread across more than 100 special stages. Long-form stages that stitch multiple sections together into 15-20km runs are where the simulation really clicks, demanding genuine concentration over a sustained period. The classic car roster, which includes the Lancia Stratos and Renault Alpine, adds some welcome variety for anyone who grew up watching rally on weekend TV. Where things get complicated is the multiplayer side. The local split-screen option is present, which is fine for a head-to-head session on the couch, but the online component is thin: no championship modes, no lobbies to drop into, mostly leaderboard-style weekly challenges and an eSports mode aimed at ranked competitors. For my Saturday night co-op crowd, WRC 8 is a "take turns and mock each other" game rather than a live competitive one. The testing mode, which gives you an open-world space to tune suspension and practice lines without career consequences, is a smart addition and genuinely useful for new players trying to find a controller setup that works, gamepad players will want to spend time here, as the default sensitivity needs adjustment. Wheel and pedal users will feel right at home from the start. One lingering community complaint worth flagging: some players reported that a custom championship mode was never added post-launch, limiting quick-play options outside the full career structure. Steam's mixed rating at 74% positive reflects a game that rewards patience and punishes people who wanted DiRT's production gloss at a lower price point. Compared to its direct competition, WRC 8 wins on content volume but loses on visual fidelity and audio polish. The car sounds have improved from WRC 7, engine notes and turbo pops are genuinely satisfying, but the co-driver delivery is functional rather than exciting. If you are a rally fan who wants the official 2019 season licence, the WRC, WRC2, and Junior WRC tiers, and a career mode with real management teeth, this delivers. If your main criterion is "is it fun for four friends on the couch", the answer is a limited yes, because split-screen is two-player only and the fun-at-any-skill-level accessibility leans more toward patient solo play than rowdy multiplayer sessions. Riley, Scout Team

WRC 8: FIA World Rally Championship Key
RacingSimulationSports

WRC 8: FIA World Rally Championship Key

Sep 8, 2020KT RacingBigben Interactive
GamerScout Says

Closer to a proper rally sim than its reputation suggests, with a meaty career mode and over 100 stages across 14 countries, but the thin online suite and Steam's mixed score tell a story worth reading before you click buy.

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About WRC 8: FIA World Rally Championship Key

I've put time into enough rally titles to know when a studio has genuinely levelled up, and KT Racing's fourth crack at the WRC licence is one of those moments. The career mode alone is a significant departure from the series' workmanlike past: you start in the Junior WRC bracket, manage a calendar, recruit staff, rotate mechanics to prevent fatigue, and pump experience points into a four-branch R&D tree covering Team, Crew, Performance, and Reliability. That is a lot of menus for what is, at its core, a game about sliding a car sideways through a forest. Whether that sounds like fun or homework will tell you everything about whether WRC 8 is for you. On the stages themselves, the driving sits in an interesting middle ground. It is more forgiving than DiRT Rally 2.0 but still absolutely punishing if you treat it like an arcade racer, forget handbrake turns entirely, they will launch you off a cliff faster than you can blame the co-driver. The dynamic weather system is the headline feature and it earns that billing: you can start a stage in dry conditions and, partway through, get hit by a downpour that completely changes how your car behaves under braking. Rain-soaked tarmac in the German stages, snow-bound hairpins in Sweden, the red gravel of Chile, all 14 rally locations from the 2019 season are here, spread across more than 100 special stages. Long-form stages that stitch multiple sections together into 15-20km runs are where the simulation really clicks, demanding genuine concentration over a sustained period. The classic car roster, which includes the Lancia Stratos and Renault Alpine, adds some welcome variety for anyone who grew up watching rally on weekend TV. Where things get complicated is the multiplayer side. The local split-screen option is present, which is fine for a head-to-head session on the couch, but the online component is thin: no championship modes, no lobbies to drop into, mostly leaderboard-style weekly challenges and an eSports mode aimed at ranked competitors. For my Saturday night co-op crowd, WRC 8 is a "take turns and mock each other" game rather than a live competitive one. The testing mode, which gives you an open-world space to tune suspension and practice lines without career consequences, is a smart addition and genuinely useful for new players trying to find a controller setup that works, gamepad players will want to spend time here, as the default sensitivity needs adjustment. Wheel and pedal users will feel right at home from the start. One lingering community complaint worth flagging: some players reported that a custom championship mode was never added post-launch, limiting quick-play options outside the full career structure. Steam's mixed rating at 74% positive reflects a game that rewards patience and punishes people who wanted DiRT's production gloss at a lower price point. Compared to its direct competition, WRC 8 wins on content volume but loses on visual fidelity and audio polish. The car sounds have improved from WRC 7, engine notes and turbo pops are genuinely satisfying, but the co-driver delivery is functional rather than exciting. If you are a rally fan who wants the official 2019 season licence, the WRC, WRC2, and Junior WRC tiers, and a career mode with real management teeth, this delivers. If your main criterion is "is it fun for four friends on the couch", the answer is a limited yes, because split-screen is two-player only and the fun-at-any-skill-level accessibility leans more toward patient solo play than rowdy multiplayer sessions. Riley, Scout Team

Tags

steamRally SimCareer ManagementDynamic WeatherR&D TreeSplit-Screen 2-PlayerClassic CarsStage RacingeSports ModeController Tuning Required

System Requirements

System requirements for WRC 8: FIA World Rally Championship Key aren't listed yet. Check the store page for the latest specs.

Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
77
Steam
74%(2,319)

Game Info

Developer
KT Racing
Publisher
Bigben Interactive
Release Date
Sep 8, 2020

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