


Doing this will let you navigate all the menus (except for the opening title screen for some reason) and play the game using these wheels as if they were natively supported. Thankfully, with a little text file editing, we can fix all of those problems and you will have a very nice force feedback wheel to play with. You could rightfully assume that the game is just broken, as you are unable to set appropriate bindings for the wheel and pedal controls.

The menu constantly scrolls unless you hold down the brake. Unfortunately, when you try to play with a Thrustmaster TX or T300, you can barely even navigate the menus because the default bindings are completely wrong for a wheel and pedal set. As such, it requires a different setup than you would use for more realistic simulators. It supports using a force feedback wheel, but it still feels very much like playing with a controller. GRID 2 is an arcade game first and foremost, designed primarily to be played with a controller. Racing games don't really need a lot of rotation, so you can knock it down in here to something less and it will translate to all your games.Best GRID 2 Settings for Thrustmaster TX / T300 Octo| Filed under: Thrustmaster 1,080 degrees is a lot, and unless you're playing something like Euro Truck Simulator 2 or Farming Simulator 19, you're not going to use all of it. If you have a wheel with a 1,080-degree rotation on it, such as the TS-XW and the T150, you can limit how much of this you want to use. One particularly useful feature you can handle here is the rotation lock. It's also useful to get familiar with the buttons on the wheel and what each of them is numbered as, because you'll need to know that in the games.

The Thrustmaster application allows you to check the input of each part of the wheel and pedals, ensuring they're working correctly and testing the force. The majority of your wheel setup process will take place in each of the different games you want to play, but there are some things to check before you get started. (Image credit: Ben Wilson | Windows Central)
