It's also available in a pack with Spa, Monza and Nurburgring tracks for €17.50 or a little over $18.50 or around £15.50. There is also a paid DLC car from Studio 397 available for €5 or a little over $5 or a little less than £4.50. Here are some available for free on the Steam workshop:Īnd the official Marussia aslo from 2012:įormula NRD 2022 (although I think they have a newer car for 2023 that's not on the workshop)Īlong with some that are not on the Steam workshop from and There are quite a few F1 mods available for rF2. Nice suggestion though, I've downloaded plenty of mods from that forum already.Now that the F1 season will be starting this weekend, some of us may want to try our hand at driving and racing these simulated cars. The other sims do a decent job too but they always felt like games to me, rFactor is the only sim that has convinced me 100%.I own a BMW Z4, I've driven a Honda NSX, a Ferrari 458 and I've been karting for a few years so I can judge lol. I decided to give rFactor a chance after watching a few videos on Youtube and I'm not disappointed at all. Yeah true, I come from iRacing and I decided to end my subscription. It finally is getting some polish from S397. Physics and driving are second to nothing out at the moment. Combined series, carsets, variations of years and models of good quality vehicles are in the 200s. Some are various eras and years of the same track but either way, lots of tracks with new ones all the time. Including default content and 3rd party, there are close to 290 good quality tracks. People that complain about a lack of content in this sim are sadly mistaken. Look for the ASR cars and if you want to spend $10-$20 the United Racing Design stuff is good. They also have a ton of organized racing. InternationalSimRacing has a ton of cars and tracks though most now link to the Workshop but good place to stay updated. Sounds like you might be new to rFactor 2? You may like Racedepartment for content and lots of organized racing. Always double check your sources since the Workshop is usually the most up to date version. Those are NOT downloads but installed content.įYI, around 65-70% of 3rd party content is in the Workshop these days. It's the folder with the content inside those. That contains your Locations, rfm, Sounds, Vehicles etc. The folder you seem to be referring to is the 'Installed' folder.
![package rfactor 2 track package rfactor 2 track](https://static.planetminecraft.com/files/image/minecraft/texture-pack/2023/185/17382637-copyofkoboldfault_s.jpg)
I've watched Workshop updates and they definitely do not put anything in the Packages folder. The launcher does NOT, to the best of my understanding download or put any files in the Packages folder.
![package rfactor 2 track package rfactor 2 track](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/UN1JPoRwjvg/maxresdefault.jpg)
Then you WILL see it available to right click on and Install. Using your extraction program, whether it's Winzip, WinRAR, 7-zip, whatever, extract the track or vehicle. Make sure that is pointing to your above mentioned Packages. As Wolke stated, at the bottom of the Launcher is a path dialog box.
![package rfactor 2 track package rfactor 2 track](https://farm8.staticflickr.com/7220/7402010056_5d8dd166ce_c.jpg)
rfcmp track file so the Launcher can find it and allow you to manually install it. Wherever your Steam installation location is, \SteamApps\Common\rfactor 2\Packages is THE Packages Folder. My Steam install is in C:\Program Files BUT in Steam I've pointed my installation path to a separate drive D:\Steam with everything inside. I can tell there is a misunderstanding of many things here.įirst, depending on where you installed your Steam and related items the root of the path will vary from user to user. I was saying that the files are in the same package as the other tracks, they're also the same format but they still don't show in the launcher. Originally posted by tobiaspitzer:The downloads from the workshop are always installed automatically.