@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.