F1® 23
Charts
295

Players in Game

15 059 😀     2 456 😒
84,08%

Rating

Compare F1® 23 with other games
$69.99

F1® 23 Reviews

Be the last to brake in EA SPORTS™ F1® 23, the official video game of the 2023 FIA Formula One World Championship™. A new chapter in the thrilling "Braking Point" story mode delivers high-speed drama and heated rivalries.
App ID2108330
App TypeGAME
Developers
Publishers Electronic Arts
Categories Single-player, Steam Achievements, Steam Cloud, Multi-player, PvP, Online PvP, Co-op, Online Co-op, Full controller support, Shared/Split Screen Co-op, Shared/Split Screen, Remote Play Together, Shared/Split Screen PvP, VR Supported, Steam Workshop, HDR available
Genres Sports, Racing
Release Date15 Jun, 2023
Platforms Windows
Supported Languages English, Japanese, Simplified Chinese, French, Italian, German, Spanish - Spain, Dutch, Portuguese - Brazil, Spanish - Latin America, Polish, Arabic

F1® 23
17 515 Total Reviews
15 059 Positive Reviews
2 456 Negative Reviews
Very Positive Score

F1® 23 has garnered a total of 17 515 reviews, with 15 059 positive reviews and 2 456 negative reviews, resulting in a ‘Very Positive’ overall score.

Reviews Chart


Chart above illustrates the trend of feedback for F1® 23 over time, showcasing the dynamic changes in player opinions as new updates and features have been introduced. This visual representation helps to understand the game's reception and how it has evolved.


Recent Steam Reviews

This section displays the 10 most recent Steam reviews for the game, showcasing a mix of player experiences and sentiments. Each review summary includes the total playtime along with the number of thumbs-up and thumbs-down reactions, clearly indicating the community's feedback

Playtime: 4023 minutes
better then 22 and 24
👍 : 1 | 😃 : 0
Positive
Playtime: 94 minutes
Utterly boring too much management not enough fun.
👍 : 0 | 😃 : 0
Negative
Playtime: 16653 minutes
I took this to get the feel of how it is to drive on the tracks. The game fulfilled that purpose.
👍 : 1 | 😃 : 0
Positive
Playtime: 4432 minutes
what a game, this is my first experience to play game like this. and i love this game directly
👍 : 1 | 😃 : 0
Positive
Playtime: 2235 minutes
anonymous negative review: F1 23 by EA is the kind of game that asks: “What if you paid full price for last year’s game, but shinier... and somehow worse?” It’s not so much a racing simulator as it is a glorified pit stop for microtransactions disguised as motorsport. To its credit, the handling is better than F1 22… in the same way that a wobbly shopping cart is better than one missing a wheel. Sure, the cars feel a bit more planted, but so does a brick—and turning at high speed still feels like trying to steer a cruise ship with a spoon. And the AI? Half of them drive like Verstappen on Red Bull, the other half like they’re trying to parallel park at 300 km/h. Then there’s the "Braking Point 2" story mode, which is meant to add drama, emotion, and character to the sport. What it actually adds is unskippable cutscenes, painfully cliché writing, and characters so annoying you’ll start intentionally missing apexes just to feel something. “Oh no, your rival is arrogant and your teammate has feelings” – groundbreaking. Online play is a whole other circus. Either you're in a ghost town of empty lobbies or thrown into a race where three people try to play seriously while fifteen others treat Turn 1 like it's demolition derby night at Silverstone. And don’t even get me started on the penalty system. Got punted off the track? That’s a 5-second penalty—for you, of course. And in true EA fashion, the menus are a confusing, laggy jungle of overlapping modes, currencies, and a glowing "F1 World" feature that no one asked for. Yes, nothing gets the adrenaline pumping like unlocking brake pedal decals with your hard-earned XP. I bought a racing game, not FIFA: Pit Garage Edition. Conclusion: F1 23 isn’t a bad game—it’s a game that’s trying to do too much while improving too little. Underneath the clutter, there’s a solid racer... but it’s buried beneath a landslide of questionable design choices, EA-isms, and overproduced nonsense.
👍 : 1 | 😃 : 0
Negative
Playtime: 3679 minutes
Very fun game with a few bugs! Hello, I'm at your door again I just needed a friend But now I share a bed with you Am I dumb to succumb to the noise? I'm not a little boy no more I've made my stupid choices too Tell my mother that I'm sorry Tell my father just the same Tell my sister that her brother Might as well have gone insane Is there space for me in Houston? 'Cause it's spacious in LA Where the grass is always greener And the world can scream my name But you never really cared about The way that everything turned out You didn't wanna fall in love You're looking out for yourself now It's starting to piss me off I thought I had you figured out Never thought you would call my bluff Guess who belongs to someone else now
👍 : 1 | 😃 : 0
Positive
Playtime: 395 minutes
Game forces me to Desktop every 1-2 minutes. Thats unplayable
👍 : 0 | 😃 : 0
Negative
Playtime: 3336 minutes
F1 23's core gameplay features feel like they're running out of mileage, but improved polish and greater car handling keep it from falling to the back of the grid.
👍 : 1 | 😃 : 0
Positive
Playtime: 121 minutes
It's an impudence to sell this game as VR native. The jitter/tracking lag is unbearable.
👍 : 1 | 😃 : 0
Negative
Playtime: 1514 minutes
F1® 23, developed by Codemasters and published by EA Sports, delivers a refined and immersive racing experience that strikes a strong balance between authenticity, accessibility, and spectacle. Building on the foundation laid by its predecessors, F1® 23 makes key improvements in gameplay, physics, and presentation, while also reintroducing and expanding the fan-favorite story mode, “Braking Point.” With updated teams, tracks, and cars for the 2023 season, the game captures the high-speed drama and technical complexity of Formula 1 in a package that appeals to both long-time sim racers and newcomers alike. At the heart of F1® 23 is its deeply satisfying driving model, which feels noticeably more polished and predictable than in F1® 22. Improvements to tire behavior, traction, and handling provide a more intuitive and responsive feel on both controller and wheel setups. Car behavior under braking and acceleration is more consistent, especially in wet conditions or on corner exits—areas where previous entries could feel overly punishing or unrealistic. The reintroduction of the red flag system adds a welcome layer of strategic depth and immersion, especially in longer races where weather and incidents can now dynamically alter the course of a Grand Prix. “Braking Point 2,” the story-driven campaign, returns with enhanced writing, improved pacing, and more meaningful decision-making. Players once again follow fictional drivers Aiden Jackson and Devon Butler, whose intertwined narratives unfold amidst the politics and rivalries of the F1 paddock. The production values have taken a step up, with more cinematic presentation, dialogue choices, and branching outcomes that add replay value and emotional weight to the narrative. While some of the storytelling still veers into melodrama, it’s an entertaining mode that successfully bridges the gap between simulation and narrative gameplay. Career Mode remains a core highlight, offering a robust, customizable journey through multiple seasons either as a real-life driver or a created persona. Team management elements—such as R&D development, staff upgrades, and contract negotiations—remain largely unchanged, but are still satisfying for players who enjoy long-term progression. MyTeam, Codemasters' original team-building mode, continues to shine as one of the most engaging experiences in the franchise, allowing players to create and grow their own F1 team from the ground up. Improvements to AI driver behavior mean races feel more dynamic, with opponents defending more aggressively and responding more realistically to track conditions and strategic changes. Multiplayer also receives attention, with better matchmaking, more stable servers, and a new “F1 World” hub that connects various game modes—including ranked multiplayer, time trials, and daily challenges—under a unified progression system. F1 World introduces upgradeable car parts and a persistent performance level, which some fans may find controversial due to its potential impact on competitive balance. However, the rewards-based system encourages engagement across multiple modes and adds a light RPG element to what has traditionally been a pure racing experience. Graphically, F1® 23 impresses with sharp car models, detailed circuits, and atmospheric effects like dynamic weather and lighting that elevate realism. Tracks such as Las Vegas and Qatar are newly introduced or updated with great attention to detail. The audio design, including engine roars, team radio chatter, and immersive broadcast elements, further enhances the racing spectacle. Commentary, though serviceable, remains one of the few areas that still feels a bit static and could benefit from more variety and context awareness. While F1® 23 doesn’t completely reinvent the wheel, it refines nearly every aspect of the experience to deliver one of the most complete and enjoyable entries in the series to date. Its blend of realism and accessibility, paired with improved physics, a richer narrative mode, and a cohesive content ecosystem, makes it a standout installment for fans of the sport. Whether you're chasing milliseconds in time trials, managing tire strategy in a 100% race, or battling rivals in a dramatic storyline, F1® 23 offers something for every kind of racing enthusiast. Rating: 8/10
👍 : 5 | 😃 : 1
Positive
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