The RSS 2013 does not simulate a engine; it simulates a detonation . The power band is non-existent in the low revs. Dip below 8,000 RPM exiting a slow corner, and the car feels like a lethargic boat anchor. But the moment you pass 10,000 RPM, the digital tachometer becomes a blur.
At first glance, it is a ghost. A legally distinct homage to the 2013-2015 generation of Formula 1 machinery. But to dismiss it as merely a "mod" is to mistake a hurricane for a light breeze. For those who have strapped into its carbon-fiber monocoque in Assetto Corsa , the RSS 2013 V8 is not just a car; it is a time machine to the final roar of a dying mechanical era. formula rss 2013 v8
It is not a mod. It is a legacy.
At 14,000 RPM to the 18,000 RPM redline, the RSS becomes schizophrenic. The power spikes so violently that the rear tires turn into hot, smoking cheese. Driving this car is an act of constant negotiation. You do not ask for power; you beg for traction. The internal combustion engine, in its final, most extreme form, demands respect. It has no driver aids, no energy recovery system to fill the torque gap. It is just you, a throttle pedal, and 750+ horsepower trying to tear your virtual arms off. The 2013 regulations represented the peak of "Coanda-effect" exhaust blowing and complex front wings. In the RSS, you feel every newton of downforce. The RSS 2013 does not simulate a engine;
Unlike modern F1 cars (which have power steering so aggressive you could drive them with a pinky), the RSS 2013 retains the raw, unfiltered brutality of the early 2010s. But the moment you pass 10,000 RPM, the