Cài đặt Steam
đăng nhập
|
ngôn ngữ
简体中文 (Hán giản thể)
繁體中文 (Hán phồn thể)
日本語 (Nhật)
한국어 (Hàn Quốc)
ไทย (Thái)
Български (Bungari)
Čeština (CH Séc)
Dansk (Đan Mạch)
Deutsch (Đức)
English (Anh)
Español - España (Tây Ban Nha - TBN)
Español - Latinoamérica (Tây Ban Nha cho Mỹ Latin)
Ελληνικά (Hy Lạp)
Français (Pháp)
Italiano (Ý)
Bahasa Indonesia (tiếng Indonesia)
Magyar (Hungary)
Nederlands (Hà Lan)
Norsk (Na Uy)
Polski (Ba Lan)
Português (Tiếng Bồ Đào Nha - BĐN)
Português - Brasil (Bồ Đào Nha - Brazil)
Română (Rumani)
Русский (Nga)
Suomi (Phần Lan)
Svenska (Thụy Điển)
Türkçe (Thổ Nhĩ Kỳ)
Українська (Ukraine)
Báo cáo lỗi dịch thuật
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+1111111111
Please stop saying that.
Once you stop paying for your subscription, your purchased content gets locked away forever, until you start paying again. As of this writing, there is no offline testing. If this changes in the future, I will delete this comment as well.
All i did was read the first sentence, then i got interested and read the second sentence "separate account" "and launch through your web browser".
After being impressed with how bad this game could be i kept reading through, and then you say that it requires microtransactions to get the full experience AND a subscription fee?
yes, all the bad habits of the gaming industry inside a single game is impressive, individually they can be excused in some cases, i am just impressed with this combination.
Beyond that you can tactic what tracks or cars to buy since you only need to finish few races in a series per season to get free ingame credit. Although that perk kicks in outside the rookie class.