Rock Paper Shotgun said it was testing Logitech's RS H-pattern gear shifter from the pit lane at Donington Park circuit, where the writer said, “I’m sitting in the pit lane at Donington Park circuit.” [1]
The reviewer said the shifter was easy to set up and worked with 99% of the racing library they tried. [1]
The test became more awkward in Raceroom Racing Experience, where the game matches each car’s shifting style to its real-life counterpart and does not always support the shifter type chosen for a car. [1]
Raceroom uses three shifting types: paddle shifting, sequential shifting and H-pattern shifting. [1]
The writer also said Raceroom does not clearly tell players, when they select a car, which shifting type it uses. That made it harder to know whether the Logitech shifter would fit the car before loading into a race. [1]
The article cited the 1992 Mercedes 190E Evo 2 as one of the cars used in the comparison. [1]
Rock Paper Shotgun’s review centres on how the RS H-pattern shifter behaves across different games, with Raceroom standing out as the main compatibility snag in the test. [1]