| Feature | GRID 2008 | GRID 2 (2013) | GRID 2019 | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Sim-cade (Heavy cars) | Arcade (Drifty) | Sim-cade (Return to form) | | Cockpit View | Yes | No | Yes | | Career | Financial management | Fanbase/LiveRoutes | Story-driven (Nemesis) | | Best For | Racing purists | Drifting & City tracks | Modern graphics & physics |
When Codemasters released GRID 2 in May 2013, the expectations were sky-high. The original Race Driver: GRID (2008) was a masterpiece—a perfect cocktail of sim-cade handling, visceral damage modeling, and the legendary "Flashback" feature. It had a gritty, almost dangerous feel to its street circuits and touring cars. GRID 2
sits awkwardly in the middle. It is faster than 2008 but lacks the weight. It is more fun than 2019's sterile "Grid World" series, but less authentic. Mods & The PC Version (2024 Update) If you play GRID 2 on PC today, you must install the "GRID 2 Plus" mod (available on RaceDepartment). | Feature | GRID 2008 | GRID 2
In this deep dive, we break down the handling, the career mode, the infamous "No Cockpit View" decision, and whether is worth playing in 2024. The Handling Model: "True Feel" vs. "Traction Control Off" The most divisive element of GRID 2 is its handling. Codemasters introduced a system called the "True Feel" engine. The goal was to translate the sensation of speed and grip directly through the controller vibrations and visual cues, rather than through realistic weight transfer. sits awkwardly in the middle