There's an involving campaign mode to get stuck into that sees you choose a team and bike and engage in various events, races and championships as you work with your camp to keep on top of the mechanical side of your machine, ensuring it's always giving you optimal performance, an academy and private testing areas for you to get to grips with every aspect of how to control your bike on the track, an online mode and single shot races. Or at least it would be, if this Switch port wasn't so disappointingly rough. If you're looking for a game that lets you investigate and change every aspect of the machine you're riding - one that constantly requires you to get under the hood and tinker - this is the one for you. RiMS Racing is all about providing an almost staggeringly in-depth take on the maintenance, fine-tuning and constant upgrading and care that's just as much part and parcel of real-life motorsports as blasting down the track doing wheelies for the fans. This isn't a sleight on Raceward Studio's game, far from it, the eight bikes here are very obviously authentically detailed and lovingly crafted, it's just more of a pointer as to what kind of experience you should be expecting once you dive in here. In order to very quickly condense exactly what kind of motorcycle sim RiMS Racing is, consider this: There are over 500 fully licenced vehicle parts in this game and just eight actual bikes. Captured on Nintendo Switch (Handheld/Undocked)
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