Assetto Corsa EVO update marks a pivotal early access milestone that primarily focused on stabilizing the "backend" features and enabling the game's broader economy and online infrastructure
Tracks now "rubber in" more realistically. Watch the racing line develop over a weekend, providing more grip where it matters and punishing those who stray into the marbles. The Hypercar Arrival: Take the wheel of the legendary Ferrari 499P
Porsche 911 (992) GT3 Cup , Mercedes-AMG GT2 , and the Ferrari 488 Challenge Evo . assetto corsa evo v015 early access top
Performance issues persisted as well, with players reporting FPS drops and stuttering even on mid-to-high-end systems. A Chinese-language review on Steam captured the sentiment of many early adopters: "The current version is indeed worthy of the EA label—there are quite a few bugs in the game."
By December 2025, a major update injected ten new cars into the sim, including the Ferrari SF-25, Ferrari F40 LM, Porsche Cayman 718 GT4 RS, BMW M3 (E46) CSL, BMW M8 Competition Coupe, Ferrari Daytona SP3, Mini John Cooper S, Peugeot 205 T16, Renault 5 GT Turbo, and Toyota Supra Turbo RZ MK IV with a special drift variant. Assetto Corsa EVO update marks a pivotal early
Report compiled from Kunos official changelog, community testing (RaceDepartment, Sim Racing Paddock), and in-game analysis (February 2025).
The Early Access roster already includes icons like the , the Lamborghini Huracán STO , and the Mercedes-AMG GT3 . Driving a road-legal hypercar on a laser-scanned track feels distinctly different from driving a race car. The suspension is softer, the steering is less direct, and the car feels alive in a way that race cars often don't. This opens the door for the drifting, cruising, and car culture communities that defined the first game. Performance issues persisted as well, with players reporting
The sim racing community has long anticipated a true successor to the open-modding ecosystem of the original Assetto Corsa. When Kunos Simulazioni launched Assetto Corsa EVO on Steam Early Access, the foundations of a cutting-edge proprietary engine were laid. However, it is the landmark update that officially transforms this tech demo into a structured, progression-driven racing ecosystem.
The sim racing world has been buzzing since the surprise Early Access launch of earlier this year. While the initial release gave us a taste of Kunos Simulazioni’s ambitious vision—showcasing stunning laser-scanned tracks and a new driving physics engine—it was, by definition, a work in progress.