




They'll start you out with just hammering uncontrolled donuts, to trying to control it in a wider circle, to doing figure 8s. Start on the Skidpad track ( track mod available on RaceDepartment) or a big open area and follow actual drift tutorials on YouTube.If I take my headphones off and drift without sound it's much more difficult to get the throttle right Turn the sound UP! Throttle can be tough to gauge and this is where hearing the car really helps.Changing tracks will muddle your brain and when learning something new consistency is crucial. You'll learn how much speed certain corners need and with each lap you can adjust until you get closer and closer to drifting it. Stick to the same track like using the same car, you'll become familiar with one track if that's all you drift on.The more you swap cars the more you'll be starting over from square one. Stick to the same car try a lower HP car (400 or less for sure) and try to stick with it.how much your physical wheel turns) In Content Manager -> Settings -> Assetto Corsa -> Vew & UI -> View category -> "Steering wheel limit") Going 1st person and seeing the steering wheel/hands on screen has helped me tremendously (also ensure you match the visual steering rotation with that of your wheel (how much you see the wheel turn in game vs. I had a very hard time relating the amount I was turning the wheel in person with seeing where the wheels were at in game. Try different camera views I couldn't (and still can't) drift in 3rd person view.Here are the things I've noticed while learning to drift: I've been playing for about a month now, maybe an hour or so a few times each week and only just yesterday linked the first 3 corners in the base Drift track (albeit not very beautifully). There's some discussion about which car to use so I'll second using the E30 Drift or the AE86 Drift that come with the game.
