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Anonymous's avatar
Anonymous
10 years ago

Necessary PR

Can anyone give me a ballpark as to how much my PR would need to be to win this race?

I've got a PR of 832 and the current rating of the race is hard- no matter how well I run the race, I can only get to within a slightly respectable loss.

P.S. If anyone's wondering why my rep level is high compared to my story mode completion, it's because I wasn't able to do much in the way of progress while slowly increasing my rep.

26 Replies

  • TheRealJony's avatar
    TheRealJony
    Hero+
    10 years ago

    @Newerbie Of course I did. I would much prefer take the corners the proper way (which is drifting without colliding the walls) than "wall-riding" the walls to maintain speed.

    The only bad thing about drifting near the inner wall is you'll lose a lot of speed by setting your car at an angle of 45* or more.

    I'll give an example:

    Let's say Guy A is racing Guy B. They both have Koenigsegg CCXs with the same amount of PR. They're both accelerating at 370 km/h and are both approaching a sharp corner.

    Now, here's where things get interesting...

    Guy A decides to take the corners the proper way by drifting without colliding the walls. However, the corner is really sharp so Guy A has to drift at a 45* angle. Since Guy A's angle is too big, their speed dropped to 330 km/h.

    Guy B decides to "wall-ride" the corner. Guy B drifts very slightly and then uses Nitrous when approaching the walls. Guy B then "wall-rides" the corner while maintaining their drifting (since drifting gives Nitrous) and using Nitrous (since Nitrous increases speed) at the same time. Every time Guy B loses speed from wall contact, the speed returns from Nitrous used for drifting. Guy B exits the corner at 360 km/h (maybe even exit the corner at 370 km/h).

    Speed is the biggest factor here. It doesn't matter whether you exit the corner the proper way or improper way, but your opponent will pass you if you lose a ton of speed from a sharp corner.

    The best example for this is Marcus King's race. Notice how you take a corner properly and you'll be eating Marcus King's dust before you know it. If you "wall-ride" instead, then you'll exit corners much faster than Marcus King.

    Now, don't get me wrong. I would much rather take corners the proper way myself, but I'm just saying "wall-riding" is faster if you have a fast car (like Koenigsegg CCX).

    "Wall-riding" is faster ONLY if you do it right. Do it wrong and you'll exit corners much slower than taking a corner properly.

  • Anonymous's avatar
    Anonymous
    10 years ago
    @TheRealJony Still not too sure on the concept of wall-riding. I just drift the inside wall as close as possible to see how close I can get it without colliding (like in Tokyo Drift😆). I didn't know there was an improper way to drift.
  • TheRealJony's avatar
    TheRealJony
    Hero+
    10 years ago

    @Newerbie Try it out when racing against Marcus King.

    In the first race, do what you normally do.

    In the second race, wall-ride on the corners while drifting and using Nitrous. (You have to do it right though)

    You'll see a big difference between the two races if you had done everything right. 😉

  • Anonymous's avatar
    Anonymous
    10 years ago
    @TheRealJony

    I've just completed the race with my viper.

    I didn't wall ride- too complicated for me.

    I drifted just about all the turns up to the last tunnel as tight to the inside wall as possible to exit faster and build up my nitro to about a third full each burst. I guess this style has merit.

    Here's what I won with:
  • Anonymous's avatar
    Anonymous
    10 years ago

    I've been blunted at the 3rd race of the final chapter.  By far, my most built car is a maxed out Nissan GT-R R35, which is at 886.  I know in time I could beat this third race, but I'm going to wait until I've another car that hits 900, at least.

    So here's a question: when you click on the icon of, let's say, your engine, and it gives what appear to be PR Points, what do those numbers actually mean? For instance, The maxed out Legendary of the Nissan GT-R R35 lists the each number at 770.  Yet the car is 886.

    My Lamborghini Aventador, with only 3 blueprints, but fully built to its max with those 3 blueprints is at 752 PR, yet the engine is a 884.

    What are these numbers? They don't seem to have any bearing on anything at all, though I assume they represent PR in some way.

    Also, anyone know what the max PR of the Lamborghini Aventador is?  It seems the most likely candidate for jacking up PR to finish these races...

  • @wwwgoudy those PR numbers on any single part is one of the reminders that the more you play, the more cash you have to spend, and the less benefit (PR raise) you get.

    As you have seen, there is no real link between parts PR and cars PR, except the obvious: increasing the parts PR you can increase cars PR.

    Otherwise, you will find:

    - for all cars in the same rank (Street, Muscle, Super etc.) you will have parts with the same PR (when equipped with same materials)

    - but the increase in cars PR is not to be predicted (calculated). When you equip 200PR Fiesta with maxed out parts (each having 280PR), you'll get 575 PR (+375, +187%), while equipping same parts into baseline Golf, you'll get 631 PR (+356, +129%). Still, the total cars PR is at least twice the PR of each part. While when you upgrade your hyper car (costs tens of millions of cash and huge number of materials), you'll get 994 PR instead of base 800 (that is +194 and only +24%), and each parts PR is higher than PR of the car itself

    And in the last paragraph you can find the answer why I don't think Aventador is ideal car for the end game - it is too expensive. You can farm McLaren blueprints much easier, upgrade that car much cheaper, and the total PR difference is only about 5PR points.

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