I don't understand how many of you are still baffled by this![]()
I know what you mean, generally it can be anything from a cavity in your tooth to the milky way, but in the context it's being used and judging from the past GT games, I'd say the meaning is pretty specific and is pointing to exactly what I've said. I can see some of you irrationally hold some high(too) hopes, but everything considered, I think it is going to be precisely that,20 locations,70 tracks. ...maybe just a few more perhaps,but that's it.A location is a very broad term, it can be as specific as turn 4 on Fuji all the way to Earth and beyond.
Like has already been said earlier, I believe a location will be 'The Alps', and then we'll have four or five tracks there - a 10 mile mountain pass, a 'loop' track, and a few point-to-point tracks. Then with 'Japan' as a location we'll have Suzuka (Full, East etc) and Fuji (80s, 2000, reverse, etc).
*Looks in PC's GTR2/rFactor folder
*Opens up the 'Locations' folder
*Sees folders with names of tracks, not countries
For example you don't go out of the country, what would you type in the satnav to find the place you want to go to ? ( not just the area code & city/town ).
Just like everybody here, I was spending my time playing GT5P while waiting for GT5. Then I suddenly took a look at the world map you see when you return to the main menu. I saw the locations and I recalled the 20 locations mentioned by PD.
After writing all the locations down I came to a positively shocking conclusion; the map contains 21 locations!
Since it takes very little effort to add some other locations I figured these specific locations are there for a reason; they will be in GT5.
These are the 21 locations:
- Le Mans
- Silverstone
- Zolder
- Magny Cours
- Motegi
- Estoril
- Monte Carlo
- Suzuka
- Jerez
- Nürburg
- Sonoma (Infineon Raceway)
- Sjanghai
- Tsukuba
- Daytona Beach
- Imola
- Hockenheim
- Spa Franchorchamps
- Monza
- Monterey (Laguna Seca Raceway)
- Brands Hatch
- Fuji
Ofcourse all the non existing circuits don't have any real locations, so they didn't add them to their locations.
If this is true, and I'm quite positive it is, the above list will be a big part of the GT5 tracklist and I would be very glad because we if so, we will be able to play with about 4 times as many real circuits as in GT4!
20 countries? Lets see (from previous GTs)...Only problem is that...20 countries seems a bit too much for me. Any ideas?
I like this idea, but what about London? And the top gear circuit,and eiger? would that not bring it up to 24 locations BEFORE GTs made up tracks?
Why cant they just say in an interview "there will be xx TRACKS,with most tracks featuring more than 1 variation"
I dont think the TG track will have a "reverse" or "short circuit" (even though TG have used a short circuit once or twice) but the likes of Fuji will have many variations
I hope they feature the nurburg GP circuit too instead of just the green hell, PGR has about 4 variations at nurburg
20 countries? Lets see (from previous GTs)...
1.Japan
2.Korea
3.Hong Kong SAR (China)
4.United States
5.France
6.Italia
7.UK
8.Switzerland
9.Germany
10.Spain
11.Monaco
12.French Polynesia
You could count GT originals as 1 location or you could not. Still, tracks in 8 new countries isnt out of the question. Belgium (Zolder or Spa) and Malaysia obviously would come to mind as possible new locations for PD. Also, Portugal (Estoril, Algarve), Czechy, Brasil, Netherlands (Zandvoort, Assen), Argentina, Singapore, Canada, Scandinavia (Rally), Finland (Rally), Mainland China, Australia, Austria, South Africa, Mexico, Turkiye etc. would be reasonable locations to find new tracks in a GT game. They could even build street circuits in countries like Russia (Moskva or Leningrad) or Greece (Athens). They have had 5 years.
If you watch the IGN video where Kaz says, "20 locations, and 70 types of courses within these locations," he makes a very broad, sweeping gesture with his hand when he says "locations." Of course, it's not definitive, but this makes me think "locations" means something large and/or general like countries or regions, such as Southeast United States, rather than a specific place like Laguna Seca. At least, if I was talking about a specific place like Silverstone, I would've made an entirely different gesture than the one he made.Unfortunately, IGN cut back to trailer footage after that, so you can't read his body language for "70 types of courses within these locations." Also, the phrasing of that entire sentence just makes me think he's talking about 70(ish) tracks spread across 20 areas of the world.
Also, "20 tracks with 70 variations" just doesn't make very much sense to me. GT4 had 51 variations of 40 tracks, or about 1.25 variations per track. Jumping to 3.5 variations per track just seems highly unlikely, as GT has never had anything close to that. That's around triple the normal number of variations for all previous GT games. Most tracks in GT don't have any variations at all, much less an average of more than three. Yes, T10 has ratios like that with Forza, but PD isn't T10 and this isn't Forza. PD have never had numerous variations per track, and they don't count reverse runs as a "variation."
I expect to see 50-60 tracks, with a total of 70+ layouts, not counting reverse runs, meaning each "location" will be home to 2-4 tracks. Those numbers are far more in line with the numbers PD have given us in the past.