

If you’d still like to check it out for yourself, and you’ve got $30 lying around, DCL is also available on steam and on consoles. Other than free weekends, I haven’t played much of it. But seeing as I’ve already got three sims that do everything, I haven’t sprung for getting DCL. I haven’t tried it since launch, so it may have improved.
#FPV.SKYDIVE SIMULATOR#
Interesting maps and decent online multiplayer, but the simulator physics just aren’t there. Prettiest graphics by far, but also pretty resource intensive on your PC. Named accordingly, the DCL sim is the first sim that I can’t really recommend as a sim. During these pandemic times, though, the show hasn’t been filmed anywhere live this season, and the league was completely held on the sim. In the past, you could get on the show and get to compete in the league, as the sim pilot, flying the real deal, by winning enough pre-season tournaments on the sim. What makes the DRL sim unique, though, is the show. But my favorite part about DRL is how it handles online multiplayer by putting you up against the ghost quads of other pilots best times, specifically the next couple of pilots on the leaderboard for that map/track. No steam workshop, but it also has custom maps and a map editor. Like liftoff it features a bunch of maps, various drone sizes, the ability to customize and PID tune. I found it easier to set up and have fun with than Liftoff, but it doesn’t feel as tight and responsive as Velocidrone does. Another FPV sim available on steam, but starting out at just 10 bucks, DRL has been developed by and is tied in to the TV show of the same name.
