7
It makes a HUGE difference. Best option PD gaves us so far.
I actually vary it per car, depending on how many turns the steering wheel must be turned lock to lock, in about 0.25 increments. If the real-life car takes 3.00 turns lock to lock, I'll put it on zero. If it takes about 2.75 (steering is faster in real-life) I'll put it at +1.
sprplayOh, the first minus. Why?
Except the DS3's analog stick has nothing to do with mapping to a wheel ratio when instead it maps to what the game feels is the maximum relevant turn angle (just beyond pushing to understeer). The sensitivity maps to a non-linear algorithm (more or less change at the low angles) and the responsiveness of the in-game steering wheel to steering input. But most of you probably have no idea what I'm talking about.I actually vary it per car, depending on how many turns the steering wheel must be turned lock to lock, in about 0.25 increments. If the real-life car takes 3.00 turns lock to lock, I'll put it on zero. If it takes about 2.75 (steering is faster in real-life) I'll put it at +1.
http://www.new-cars.com/2003/acura/acura-nsx-specs.html
For instance, in the link above, it says the Acura takes 3.22 turns lock-to-lock, which seems a little slow, but whatever. I'd set my controller at -1 then.
Most of you probably have no idea what I'm talking about.
For a full-scale racing car, where steering speed/ratios could actually be changed (like the NASCAR vehicles) I'll change the dual-shock's steering to whatever I feel like changing it to. I'm liking +3 best (NASCAR steering in-game is pretty slow otherwise).
How can you drive with +7 ?
I use 0, the stock settings are the best.
Everyone should try and do this:
1. Change to sensivity 7
2. Drive with it for 10 minutes
3. Change back
4. Drive with sensivity 0
5. Find out how much better the extra sensivity makes your driving![]()