Grand Touring 7 is the latest installment of Polyphony Digital’s driving simulator, which arrived on PS4 and PlayStation 5 in March this year. Despite having the best graphics and gameplay we’ve seen in the series, Gran Turismo 7 has been criticized for its microtransactions and the price of their carswhich have increased with updates.
A new update to Gran Turismo 7 arrived this week that adds three new vehicles, but update 1.15 is also going to adjust the prices of some vehicles soon.
Related: Gran Turismo 7 players upset by update that made it unplayable.
Prior to its launch, it was confirmed that Sony had partnered with the Hagerty car insurance company, which would be in charge of establishing the prices of some cars that we found at the legendary car dealership. Among the notes of the update 1.15 of Gran Turismo 7 it is warned that some cars will change their rating following real life.
According to the GTPlanet forums, of the 50 cars affected by these changes, 27 have increased or will increase their price, 21 will remain the same and 2 will reduce their price slightly. However, some cars increased their price too much, such as the Ferrari F40 that went from costing 1.35 million credits to 2.6 million.
Read more: Gran Turismo 7 is the worst rated PlayStation game on Metacritic.
In March, Polyphony Digital had apologized to Gran Turismo 7 players for race rewards and car prices, giving away one million credits to all affected players. A short time later, Sony increased the rewards per race to avoid micro-transactions.
Source: VGC.