F1 2015 officially made its debut on the PlayStation 4 (PS4), Xbox One and PC, but the latter is apparently experiencing severe issues.

Shortly after the game's launch, users started reporting various issues spreading across all platforms, but the PC port seems to be the most affected. A number of bad PC ports have marred the gaming experience of many titles, and F1 2015 seems to be the latest botch.

Complaints are piling up regarding the F1 2015 PC version, with users reporting a slew of issues with bugs, glitches, missing features, crashes, framerates problems and more. Even the racing wheels and pedals, as well as the control settings are botched on the PC version, and users are becoming increasingly frustrated.

A growing thread on the Steam forums warns gamers about the broken port for the PC version of F1 2015 and complaints cover a wide range of issues, from general feature support to graphics and what-not.

"The game at this state is unplayable to anyone using a controler due to various bugs in controller presets and so, but also on benchmark craches, engineer speech/audio problems, and FPS abrup drops when on championship mode," warned the first comment in the thread. "If the game is like this right now, and they delayed it 1 month, i cant even imagine how it was like 1 month ago, when it was supposed to be released... because as is, its broken."

Other users are complaining about the lack of SLI support, the resolution erverting to 800 x 600 when opening the game, multiplayer session crashes, input lag, ghost cars and more. One user even reports getting a blue screen on their computer after quitting the game.

Codemasters Community Manager LiteralZero announced a fix that should resolve a number of the issues users are experiencing with the F1 2015 PC port.

"We are aware of players encountering some issues with the PC build, and we have just pushed a new build to Steam," reads the announcement.

While this bad F1 2015 PC port caused a lot of frustration, Codemasters' prompt response is laudable and should help appease disgruntled gamers.

ⓒ 2024 TECHTIMES.com All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission.
Join the Discussion