Best City Car Driving Settings for Logitech G29 / G920

City Car Driving is a completely different kind of driving game than a typical racing game. Focused entirely on teaching safe driving techniques, you are never going to be pushing the car to the limits of grip. As such, the force feedback is incredibly basic. It's mostly a centering force and some vibrations if you hit a curb or go onto the grass.

Unfortunately, the presets for the Logitech G29 and G920 have some strange issues. The force feedback is turned off and it has non-linear steering applied. This makes turning the car feel nothing like a real car, which is the entire point of the game. Thankfully, it is very easy to fix.

In this guide, I will show the settings I use to get the wheel feeling as good as it can.

G HUB Settings

City Car Driving uses the steering angle that is set in G HUB. Unfortunately, the in-game steering animation is always locked to a 1080° rotation, so it won't line up perfectly with these wheels.

If you want to create a custom profile for City Car Driving, be aware that the binary you need to select is:

City Car Driving\bin\win32\starter.exe

Setting Value
Operating Range 900°
Sensitivity 50
Centering Spring Off

City Car Driving Settings

In Settings > Controls > Basic Settings:

Setting Value
Control Unit Steering Wheel
Set of Settings Logitech G29 / G920 (+ shifter)

Use the preset available for your wheel and if you have the shifter. This is nearly perfect, but you have to manually fix the Steering Linearity and enable the Force Feedback below.


In Settings > Controls > Advanced Settings > Vehicle Control:

Setting Value
Accelerator Linearity ~30%
Brake Linearity ~30%
Left Steering: -
Right Steering: +
Sensitivity 0
Dead zone 0
Linearity 0

Accelerator and Brake Linearity can be raised to about 30% to feel more natural, but this is personal preference.

Steering Sensitivity has no effect on these wheels, so the value doesn't actually matter. It is only useful for cheap wheels with very limited rotation.

Steering Deadzone should always be set to zero.

Steering Linearity needs to be manually lowered to zero. This is the most important change you have to make. The default creates a non-linear steering, which is extremely unrealistic.


In Settings > Controls > Advanced Settings > Feedback:

Setting Value
Switched On Checked
Force Feedback Scale ~65%

Force Feedback Scale controls the strength of the centering force and vibrations. Unfortunately, there are no numbers in the interface, so I have included a screenshot so you can see the actual value. Thankfully the precise value isn't important, anything in that range will work just fine.

Conclusion

City Car Driving focuses on learning the rules of the road more than delivering a thrilling driving experience. On that front, it does a fairly good job. I wouldn't say it's realistic, but the amount of cars slamming on their brakes for seemingly no reason and pedestrians randomly walking out into the streets will certainly teach you to be a defensive driver.

Let me know if you have any questions or comments.

Question or Comment?