You learn something new.
See, this is why I love this game. I got myself sorted out with a blinding setup (My own I hasten to add*. Making a setup, for me, is one of the best parts of LFS). It was giving me mid 1.43's on AST. NAT. on a regular basis, on a mouse at that, so I thought 'right, time to go and take this show on the road'.
Whoaaaa, I had to say. This is nuts. That shithot setup I had, ain't so shithot on Kyoto, or on BW. But I know my shit now, so I change a few things, get competative. Start lowering my PB's. Then I start talking to the fast guys, looking at some of thier sets. And they arn't just different, they are COMPLETLY different . . .
Man, just when I thought I got it sorted LFS gets me thinking, changing and testing again.
God I love this game.
If there is one thing this game has taught me it's . . . . don't fear change. Change is good. Change could give you a PB.
*When I say my own sets. What I really mean is mostly my own sets. There are some track or car idiosyncracies that a layman like me just would never get from reading the manual or testing. So even though I might have gathered info from other sets I still profess to making my own. Honest guv.
See, this is why I love this game. I got myself sorted out with a blinding setup (My own I hasten to add*. Making a setup, for me, is one of the best parts of LFS). It was giving me mid 1.43's on AST. NAT. on a regular basis, on a mouse at that, so I thought 'right, time to go and take this show on the road'.
Whoaaaa, I had to say. This is nuts. That shithot setup I had, ain't so shithot on Kyoto, or on BW. But I know my shit now, so I change a few things, get competative. Start lowering my PB's. Then I start talking to the fast guys, looking at some of thier sets. And they arn't just different, they are COMPLETLY different . . .
Man, just when I thought I got it sorted LFS gets me thinking, changing and testing again.
God I love this game.
If there is one thing this game has taught me it's . . . . don't fear change. Change is good. Change could give you a PB.
*When I say my own sets. What I really mean is mostly my own sets. There are some track or car idiosyncracies that a layman like me just would never get from reading the manual or testing. So even though I might have gathered info from other sets I still profess to making my own. Honest guv.
What works for one in one track , will almost defintely need adjustments for another track , just like F1 racing , all those different courses and tempratures means its excellent fun to do just like the pros do , and do practice laps on a circuit before actually racing on it. Then that gives good advice on what needs to be changed , perhaps tyre pressures slightly , or whatever it is , to give you your best possible lap time on that track. Moving onto another circuit for the next race of the season means , yet again , spending all weekdays testing and trying for the next new PB on the new circuit.
) lol
