Playseat's pro sim racing cockpit makes it look like I mean business and is $100 off for Cyber Monday
Just a shame looks aren't everything.
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Playseat Trophy | Sim racing cockpit | Red | $599 $499 at Playseat (save $100)
If you can spare the space (this racing rig won't pack down to a smaller size), this is one of the comfiest and sturdy racing rigs I've ever used at home. There's space for your pedals and wheel as standard, and everything stays firmly in place so you can really slam on the load-cell brake if need be while racing. Logitech aren't selling it any cheaper right now, so worth a punt on Amazon's discount price.
Sim racing can swiftly become a black hole for spending money if you let it. It starts off with a wheel, then some nicer pedals, then a load-cell brake, then a sim racing cockpit, then maybe you just go out and buy a track day race experience, and eventually a hypercar. Okay, that last bit is wishful thinking on my part, but my point is it's easy to spend a lot on sim racing equipment.
That's why I like this deal at Playseat that shaves $100 off the excellent Trophy cockpit—it makes the sim racing hobby a touch less expensive. You can pick the whole cockpit up for $499.
I've been using the Trophy sim racing cockpit for around half a year now, and you can read up on my full thoughts in my Playseat Trophy review. The short version is it's probably the sturdiest sim rig I've ever sat in—it's built out of these thick tubes that don't wobble a single iota during use. It's also damn comfortable, and keeps you in a more aggressive racing posture than a more upright wheel/pedal stand might.
- We're curating all the best Cyber Monday PC gaming deals right here.
The Trophy keeps your pedals firmly in place, which is one of the main reasons I'm even after a sim racing cockpit to begin with. I hate that pedals can slip or slide around even on carpeted floors, and to be honest the block of wood I was using to keep my pedals steady against my wall wasn't really cutting it for competitive driving. Who'd have thought it?
Not that my driving has majorly improved for the sim racing rig, but I wouldn't dare blame my tools for my frequent understeer in Forza Motorsport. I'm more of an F1 23 guy, and I'm just used to a bit more grip through the corners.
That's all besides the point: the Playseat Trophy is a great sim racing rig, and I'm a bit of a convert to the sim rig lifestyle. That said, the Trophy is kinda massive, and you can't fold it down without disassembling it—that takes a while, so you won't be doing that each time you want to use it. The best you can do is tip the Trophy onto the seat's back and store it upright, which saves a bit of space.
Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.

Jacob earned his first byline writing for his own tech blog, before graduating into breaking things professionally at PCGamesN. Now he's managing editor of the hardware team at PC Gamer, and you'll usually find him testing the latest components or building a gaming PC.


