
The managerial career is much deeper and with greater involvement beyond just racing, as you create your own team (you still ride in races, yourself) and sign new riders and sponsors, developing your bikes throughout the season in order to be the best. The rider’s career is much the same as the last game, as you take your custom rider (male or female, from set visual choices) from the Red Bull Rookies championship, all the way to the top of the MotoGP standings. These are probably self-explanatory but I’ll go ahead and sum them up anyway. And with 18 official tracks to race on, it offers so much content.īut after last year’s fantastic career mode, Milestone has gone one step further, this time offering two separate career modes: Rider and Managerial. There’s a plethora of game modes, such as the usual exhibitions, championships (including co-op), splitscreen multiplayer and of course the online racing, and there are a huge number of licensed bikes and riders to choose from across MotoGP, Moto 2 and 3, as well as Red Bull Rookies. It does mean that the personality is gone though, so it’s more of a po-faced representation of the motorsport, but Milestone just lets the racing itself do the talking. This means that the dirtbike stuff has gone too, so that MotoGP becomes the true focus of the game. So, where does Milestone go from there?įirstly, it has stripped away the Valentino Rossi name and made it all about the sport itself, not one rider.

#Motogp 19 riding styles series
It put a wayward series back on-track (sorry) and included one of the best career modes available in any racing game, not just the two-wheeled variety.


I was pleasantly surprised by last year’s Valentino Rossi: The Game, which was, confusingly, actually the official MotoGP ‘16 title.
