the reality is this... The very best all-season tires (that work rain or shine) you can buy in real life qualify as comfort soft tires in GT. The very best slicks you can buy in real life are about as good as sports hard tires in GT. All the gripperyer tires are very special expensive tires that a regular enthusiast would never have access to in real life.
Look at the prices... Racing tires in GT cost more than most of the cars in the game. It's the same way for tires that are used on professional race cars.
The only cars that should have racing tires in GT are the cars that come with racing tires. If you're just using a hopped up street car, it defeats the purpose of playing a simulation for it to wear tires that cannot be had for it.
👍Personally I use comfort soft tires on most road legal cars that aren't supercars (for them I use sports hard tires). Thinking about it, comfort soft tires are performance street tires, while sports hard tires are road-legal semi-slick tires for trackday use! Very few cars have them by factory and very few people except the most dedicated and wealthy track-day drivers actually regularly use them, even on tuned cars.
Too bad that online, even in rooms without SRF, few people use anything other than RS tires, let alone comfort tires.
Yeah, but I upgraded my Honda Z Act... At top it reaches 80hp. I'm NOT saying it's realistic at all... the suspension would probably crack... But the fact remains I can make the Z Act do things on racing tires which can never happen on sports tires. Again, not going for realism here... it's a game, my point in doing it was to have some fun with it. Period. (Made grinding k-cup seasonals more kooky & fun.)
^^^You have "digital" figured out, but, your feel for the word "feel" is lacking.
Let's be honest here, any perception of "feeling" a player gets from their GT5 experience is simply a trick the player's mind plays on them based on the visual and auditory output of the game - what you see on your screen and what you hear from the speakers.
Oh, and if it wasn't clear, (and maybe it wasn't) when I'm talking about "feel", I'm specifically and singularly talking about experiencing real-world, external physical stimuli.
Still think GT5 makes you "feel" like your driving?
No doubt or dispute that tire selection impacts how well a vehicle responds. Because of how well GT5 represents vehicle response, it's quite noticeable - but it's not "felt".