
It's still in production, and for around $300, you get a triple set of pedals alongside a beautiful, leather-bound wheel loaded with face buttons and responsive gear-shifting paddles. The G920 from Logitech, also known as the G29, is one of the longest-serving steering wheels on our list, and it's here for a good reason. Connect it to a simple desk or a full-sized cockpit for an affordable entry into simulation racers on Xbox. The included pedals are enough to get you started with automatic transmission, but a physical shifter can still connect to a spare port underneath the base. The hybrid drive force feedback is technically the weakest technology for simulation wheels, but it's powerful enough to provide real immersion to Xbox racing titles.Īdjusting your in-game settings for titles such as DIRT 5 can provide a near-perfect feel for most vehicles with this basic model. Listed with official support for the Xbox One and the Xbox Series X|S consoles, you get a wide variety of on-wheel buttons alongside chunky gear shifters. If you've never owned a racing wheel before, the T128 is a perfect starting point. The colored LEDs light up as you feed the gas on the included double pedal set, which is also constructed entirely from plastic, for a shockingly similar feedback experience. The T128X is a cost-cutting plastic Xbox steering wheel that uses the same servo base internals as its more luxurious sibling, stripping out the fully-fledged HUD but replacing it with a slick rev meter. You'll probably notice how similar this affordable alternative looks to the T248X top choice, and I discovered in my Thrustmaster T128 review that it's no coincidence.
