The hardware requirements are pretty steep: You need a fast (500-plus MHz) CPU, a hot video accelerator (the nVidea GeForce series is favored), plenty o' RAM (128 Mb is modest in this league), and a proper steering-wheel-and-pedals setup like ThrustMaster's NASCAR Pro Digital 2 ($55). Or, if you're not into online racing, you can race against the computer, providing it has more horsepower than a Robert Yates qualifying engine has. Thanks to the same lone gunmen who brewed up the world's best road-racing simulation (the venerable "Grand Prix Legends"), I can now trade paint-online or off-with the Waltrips, the Wallaces, the Jarretts, the Labontes, et familia alia, in "NASCAR Racing 4." (Many of today's real-world hotshoes hone their skills on the Internet under clever pseudonyms, of course.) You can, too. Ever since I was a kid, all I've ever wanted to do is race cars.
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