Immersive Gaming Experience: Perfect for PlayStation 5, PS4 and PC gaming titles, the Driving Force simulates the feeling of driving a real car with precision steering and pressure-sensitive pedals
Premium Control: The Driving Force feedback racing wheel provides a detailed simulation of driving a real car, with helical gearing delivering smooth, quiet steering and a hand-stitched leather cover
Customizable Pedals: These pressure-sensitive nonlinear brake pedals provide a responsive, accurate braking feel on a sturdy base – with adjustable pedal faces for finer control
900-Degree Rotation: Lock-to-lock rotation of the Driving Force means you can turn the wheel around two and a half times, hand over hand on wide turns – just like a real F1 race car
Up Your Game: Take your racing simulation to the next level with Driving Force accessories like the Driving Force Shifter or desk and rig mounts
The plastic parts in G29 Driving Force include 52% certified post consumer recycled plastic*.Certified carbon neutral.
Total Wheel Control: Control wheel sensitivity, force feedback levels, and button customization via powerful G HUB Gaming Software for PC. Download at logitechG /downloads
Wheel: Length: 10.24 in (260 mm) Height: 10.63 in (270 mm) Width: 10.94 in (278 mm) Weight without cables: 4.96 lb (2.25 Kg) Pedals: Length: 16.87 in (428.5 mm) Height: 6.57 in (167 mm) Width: 12.24 in (311 mm) Weight without cables: 6.83 (3.1 Kg)
Specification: Logitech G29 Driving Force Racing Wheel and Floor Pedals, Real Force Feedback, Stainless Steel Paddle Shifters, Leather Steering Wheel Cover for…
Standing screen display size
16 Inches
Item Dimensions LxWxH
10.24 x 10.94 x 10.63 inches
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer
No
Country of Origin
China
Manufacturer
Logitech
Batteries
1 Lithium Metal batteries required.
Optical Drive Type
DVD-R DL
Hard Drive Rotational Speed
21 RPM
Hard Drive Interface
PC Card
Flash Memory Size
21
Computer Memory Type
Unknown
Number of Processors
2
Processor Brand
AMD
Color
Black
Product Dimensions
10.24 x 10.94 x 10.63 inches
Processor
21 hertz 1_2GHz_Cortex_A8
Item Weight
4.96 pounds
Operating System
playstation 5
Hardware Platform
PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, PlayStation 3
Item model number
941-000110
Series
G29
Brand
Logitech G
Number of USB 3.0 Ports
21
Number of USB 2.0 Ports
2
Graphics Card Ram Size
21 MB
Card Description
Dedicated
Chipset Brand
VIA
Hard Drive
21 MB Mechanical Hard Drive
RAM
8 GB A8
Date First Available
June 18, 2015
9 reviews for Logitech G29 Driving Force Racing Wheel and Floor Pedals, Real Force Feedback, Stainless Steel Paddle Shifters, Leather Steering Wheel Cover for…
4.2out of 5
★★★★★
★★★★★
7
★★★★★
0
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0
★★★★★
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1
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★★★★★
GODSPEED|seven –
Well, I’ve been using this for approximately 1 month now. Not that long, but have enough hours on this wheel to make a decent appraisal of its qualities and flaws.
To understand the title and following ‘review’, please understand that my use may be different than your use. I enjoy racing games, but in a casual relaxing way. I play lots of Assetto Corsa and Project Cars 2, but not in a serious manner. I usually do practice laps with some music in the background just to relax. I don’t even care about racing all that much.
What I do use this wheel for the most, and where my passion lies, is with the slower paced simulators. Bus Simulators, Truck Simulators (Euro Truck Simulator 2, American Truck Simulator, Bus Simulator 18, to name the popular ones).
So with THAT in mind… …let’s start with cons and finish with pros;
CONS —– Price when not on sale. —- Real crappy software profiler. Lots of issues with lots of games the profiler doesn’t “support”. —- Center feels absolutely numb and dead; no feedback when steering is near center. —- Near the center and within 5-10 degrees each side, you can feel the teeth of the gears. — G29 red turning knob is pure garbage, doesn’t properly function, doesn’t always register and sometimes registers as double for one click. — Rather rough/grindy-teeth feedback when cornering, not like a real steering input/feel. — Small steering, way too small. Looks/feels like a toy. — Gamepad button clutter. Looks like a fancy gamepad, not a “steering wheel”. — Clutch pedal has too little feel or pressure to feel right. Not worth using if you’ve driven real manual, too toy-like. – Short cables. – Don’t like that the flapping gear changers turn with the wheel. – Pedals don’t stick so well to the floor or carpet unfortunately… – …especially under heavy brake pressure, because brake pressure is way too stiff too early. – A lot of fiddling around settings and tweaking in too many games. For a “starter” wheel, I would have expected such a popular product to have incredible out-of-the-box support with most games having the right settings. Not the case. Most games have horrible settings that don’t feel normal to a real car driver.
A MATTER OF TASTE -/+ “Leather” feels a little too ‘hard’, wished it was thicker (especially considering the full asking price, which I would never pay). -/+ Always does its rotates when PC boots or wakes from sleep. -/+ Cables are tidy underneath, but also makes it more of a chore to setup and put away. -/+ big external power brick with short cable. -/+ the back of the “wheel” looks like the front of a mustang. Childish look in my opinion.
PROS +++++ The cons make me anxious to upgrade for a better wheel asap! ++++ Feels really solid and well built. I feel it will survive longer than I want it to, unfortunately. ++++ positive feeling buttons, they feel solid and not flimsy. +++ Apart from the gamepad looks, the steering ‘looks’ good with the blue center bar. +++ Nicely shaped wheel ++ Nice metal pedals ++ Works very well with Assetto Corsa with no tweaking! ++ Assetto Corsa is the only game that makes this wheel feel good (that I know of, too much tweaking and numbness in other games) + Won’t break the bank too much if your looking for a taste at virtual driving.
CONCLUSION If you can afford it, skip this wheel. Get something with a smooth brushless motor. The grindy feeling of the wheel is completely unlike driving a real car. No amount of tweaking feedback settings can fix this.. and the wrong settings actually even accentuate the toy=like feeling.
NEVER BUY THIS AT FULL PRICE!!! Not even worth its sale price!
Very happy with purchase. Device works well with my current console. I would recommend purchasing the Logitech G Driving Force Shifter, &! the Vevor G920 Stand with this unit. It needs to be securely mounted as it does distribute some torque for the FORCE feedback.
If you’re going from a handheld controller to this… be prepared to have your ego disassembled.
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★★★★★
Cronin Creative –
Very well built and purchased at 299 during prime day, so that helped. Not sure I would have pulled the trigger at the full $400 but glad I got it on sale.
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★★★★★
Dan –
Updated 11/8/22: Took off a few stars. After less than a week of using this I’m heavily considering sending it back. The dead spot in the middle just makes it too difficult to be precise when you’re cornering, and it has gotten worse already. When I first got it there was deadspace out to between 1-4 degrees on each side before resistance from the gears kicked in (you can see the alignment in Logitech’s G hub software). In less than a week it has gone up to 8-10 degrees. That’s on one side, so counting for both sides you have about 20 degrees of movement where there’s no resistance. That means 20 degrees where you get very imprecise, jerky movements. Not ideal for racing games. You can set the deadspace in-game to compensate, but then you don’t get any movement at all up until that point where the wheel catches the gears. It’s not any better. I’ve got “center spring strength” set to 100. This determine how heavy the resistance is, and how quickly the wheel returns to “center” when you let go of it. Again though, it never returns to center because the middle is loose. So it returns anywhere from 4-10 degrees on either side. Just too inaccurate for racing titles. Works good on slow-paced drivers, like American Truck Simulator.
ORIGINAL REVIEW: First things first, I was waiting by my front door when the Amazon delivery guy came. He slammed the box on the concrete step in front on my porch. Didn’t drop it, didn’t “whoops! Slipped a bit!” Just straight up slammed it down. I had my door open and was standing there, but the screen was closed, so I’m guessing he didn’t see me or he probably wouldn’t have done that. I said, “Well… thaaanks…” in response and he just turned around and walked away. Reason for bringing that up is this wheel has no protection inside. The actual wheel rests on the bottom of the box, and even with an outer box it’s pretty much taking the full force of any impact. Unfortunately, in this case it was the side that got slammed down.
WHEEL: With that out of the way the wheel has a pretty major dead zone in the middle. I’m not sure if it’s Logitech or fault or the delivery guy’s now. Doing a bit of research it has seemed to happen to some people and not others. But basically when the wheel rests at center it’s always off by a few degrees. There’s no resistance for 2-3 degrees. In-game that means any slight movement left or right causes wobbles, which makes it hard to be as accurate as you want to be while driving straight. I’ve spent probably 3 or 4 hours messing with settings in-game, in Windows and on Logitech’s (crappy) software to get it as good as I can. It’s not perfect, but it useable. Honestly though, at this price point it’s hard to expect perfect. This is definitely an entry-level set up.
I do love the force-feedback though. I had a wheel when I was a kid (Gran Turismo 1 days), and it wasn’t as technologically advanced. There was no resistance when you turn so it wasn’t as easy to judge corners, and everything was plastic and cheap. This one is nice because you can feel the resistance on the road enough to lock yourself into banks, allowing for more precise cornering than you’ll ever get with a controller. There’s weight to the wheel itself, but it also gives the vehicles weight as well.
PEDALS: The pedals are nice. Everything stays planted and doesn’t slip around when you’re pressing them. In fact, if your chair has wheels you’re more likely to push yourself backwards than you are to push the pedals forward.
The accelerator feels smooth and responsive. And there are settings in games to let you adjust it even further. Playing Forza 7 I took the initial dead one down to zero so as soon as I touch the pedal the car starts moving.
The brake is as stiff as the reviews say. I had to turn the end deadzone (where it considers the pedal fully pressed) from 100 down to 70. Otherwise you’re pretty much having to put all your weight into it if you want to brake fully. Basically, on default settings if you push the brake all the way down, it only reads as 75% breaking power, so you have to push even further than that to get it to register 100. It feels very unnatural. Even turning the brake sensitivity up to max in Logitech’s software doesn’t really help. But if you calibrate it in Windows game controller settings it will bring it down some… and then of course, messing with the in-game settings as well.
So basically to really tune this thing you’re changing options in 3 different places. To make things worse these problems get exaggerated the faster the car is that you’re driving. So the steering wheel center wobble becomes more and more touchy the faster you’re going.
Clutch feels good. It’s about as easy to press as the accelerator.
SHIFTER: I bought the shifter bundle. It feels like a toy, honestly. Very small, and the throws are tiny. I’ve mostly been using the paddle shifters and those feel perfect. The clicks are satisfying, but they also feel light and responsive.
SET UP: This was a pain in the ass to set up properly. I had G Hub on my computer already. It tried to update when I opened it and I got an instant blue screen of death. After a restart I attempted to uninstall it. It kept saying uninstall successfull but it never actually left my computer. So I had to jump through a bunch of hoops on Logitech’s forums and delete hidden folders.. but it still wasn’t uninstalled lol. I reinstalled it anyway and it repaired the corrupted files, and I finally got it to register the wheel. After that, as I mentioned, it was just a bunch of fine-tuning.
Quality: Overall quality is good. I spent $400 total with CA inflated tax prices. The wheel and pedals were $250 or so. I think that’s around the right ball park for what you’re getting and the quality. It’s not the best, but it’s not cheap plastic either (at least not the parts that matter).
Overall this beats a controller by miles, but don’t expect it to be completely useable straight out of the box. Take the time to set it up and fine tune and you’ll be fine.
Will update as time goes on. For all I know this thing is a ticking time bomb after being slammed on the ground the way it was. Hoping it doesn’t quit right outside of warranty.
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★★★★★
jacques toussaint –
Très réaliste et performant
Helpful(0)Unhelpful(0)You have already voted this
★★★★★
Kimberly DuVall –
Easy to install. One thing to be aware of …the steering wheel and controller operate on separate power sources. If you can’t steer, but all the buttons work, then the steering wheel likely isn’t plugged into its power source. You’ll read a lot of nonsense about needing to calibrate if the car keeps veering into the wall at the start. Maybe you should calibrate…later. But first you have to plug the power source into an electrical outlet. Ask me how I know. (Insert raised eyebrow emoji here.)
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★★★★★
Raymond Sun –
I got this on sale a while back while I was traveling but had it delivered back home for when I got back. I was pleasantly impressed when I got it because I used to race on controllers and felt the need to upgrade to a gaming wheel. The wheel itself has feet (which are detachable) on the bottom that are used to screw down the wheel to a table so the wheel doesn’t move when racing. The paddle shifters are responsive with a nice “clicky” sound and the wheel itself is metal in the center with a leather feel on the circumference of the wheel. The pedals are responsive and have all 3 pedals (Accelerator, Brake, and Clutch). My one gripe is that the brake pedal has very little travel before reaching an insane amount of resistance to get to 100% brake pressure which causes the whole pedal housing to slide (on carpet). The wheel pairs well with the Logitech G Hub program though and can have individual game settings applied when starting up a game. IE: Restricting wheel movement to 360 degrees for F1, 450 degrees for a GT Car, and 900 degrees for a normal car. I play a mixture of F1, Asetto Corsa, and Dirt Rally so having game specific settings is really nice to have.
GODSPEED|seven –
Well, I’ve been using this for approximately 1 month now. Not that long, but have enough hours on this wheel to make a decent appraisal of its qualities and flaws.
To understand the title and following ‘review’, please understand that my use may be different than your use. I enjoy racing games, but in a casual relaxing way. I play lots of Assetto Corsa and Project Cars 2, but not in a serious manner. I usually do practice laps with some music in the background just to relax. I don’t even care about racing all that much.
What I do use this wheel for the most, and where my passion lies, is with the slower paced simulators. Bus Simulators, Truck Simulators (Euro Truck Simulator 2, American Truck Simulator, Bus Simulator 18, to name the popular ones).
So with THAT in mind…
…let’s start with cons and finish with pros;
CONS
—– Price when not on sale.
—- Real crappy software profiler. Lots of issues with lots of games the profiler doesn’t “support”.
—- Center feels absolutely numb and dead; no feedback when steering is near center.
—- Near the center and within 5-10 degrees each side, you can feel the teeth of the gears.
— G29 red turning knob is pure garbage, doesn’t properly function, doesn’t always register and sometimes registers as double for one click.
— Rather rough/grindy-teeth feedback when cornering, not like a real steering input/feel.
— Small steering, way too small. Looks/feels like a toy.
— Gamepad button clutter. Looks like a fancy gamepad, not a “steering wheel”.
— Clutch pedal has too little feel or pressure to feel right. Not worth using if you’ve driven real manual, too toy-like.
– Short cables.
– Don’t like that the flapping gear changers turn with the wheel.
– Pedals don’t stick so well to the floor or carpet unfortunately…
– …especially under heavy brake pressure, because brake pressure is way too stiff too early.
– A lot of fiddling around settings and tweaking in too many games. For a “starter” wheel, I would have expected such a popular product to have incredible out-of-the-box support with most games having the right settings. Not the case. Most games have horrible settings that don’t feel normal to a real car driver.
A MATTER OF TASTE
-/+ “Leather” feels a little too ‘hard’, wished it was thicker (especially considering the full asking price, which I would never pay).
-/+ Always does its rotates when PC boots or wakes from sleep.
-/+ Cables are tidy underneath, but also makes it more of a chore to setup and put away.
-/+ big external power brick with short cable.
-/+ the back of the “wheel” looks like the front of a mustang. Childish look in my opinion.
PROS
+++++ The cons make me anxious to upgrade for a better wheel asap!
++++ Feels really solid and well built. I feel it will survive longer than I want it to, unfortunately.
++++ positive feeling buttons, they feel solid and not flimsy.
+++ Apart from the gamepad looks, the steering ‘looks’ good with the blue center bar.
+++ Nicely shaped wheel
++ Nice metal pedals
++ Works very well with Assetto Corsa with no tweaking!
++ Assetto Corsa is the only game that makes this wheel feel good (that I know of, too much tweaking and numbness in other games)
+ Won’t break the bank too much if your looking for a taste at virtual driving.
CONCLUSION
If you can afford it, skip this wheel. Get something with a smooth brushless motor. The grindy feeling of the wheel is completely unlike driving a real car. No amount of tweaking feedback settings can fix this.. and the wrong settings actually even accentuate the toy=like feeling.
NEVER BUY THIS AT FULL PRICE!!! Not even worth its sale price!
Ziina –
G29(海外)+シフター(国内)を同時購入。PS5やPS4に接続。初めてのフォースフィードバックハンコン。PC机に取り受け。椅子を固定。これだけでも十分、気分↑。自分は満足ですね。ただ出来ら良かったと思う点。①ハンドル径が微妙に小さく取り外し出来ない。②サイドブレーキはオプションでも無し。これらが必要でお金持ちなら次のランクの価格帯のハンコンをどうぞ。
mel –
parfait cadeau , sans se ruiner !!
Jibari –
Very happy with purchase. Device works well with my current console. I would recommend purchasing the Logitech G Driving Force Shifter, &! the Vevor G920 Stand with this unit. It needs to be securely mounted as it does distribute some torque for the FORCE feedback.
If you’re going from a handheld controller to this… be prepared to have your ego disassembled.
Cronin Creative –
Very well built and purchased at 299 during prime day, so that helped. Not sure I would have pulled the trigger at the full $400 but glad I got it on sale.
Dan –
Updated 11/8/22: Took off a few stars. After less than a week of using this I’m heavily considering sending it back. The dead spot in the middle just makes it too difficult to be precise when you’re cornering, and it has gotten worse already. When I first got it there was deadspace out to between 1-4 degrees on each side before resistance from the gears kicked in (you can see the alignment in Logitech’s G hub software). In less than a week it has gone up to 8-10 degrees. That’s on one side, so counting for both sides you have about 20 degrees of movement where there’s no resistance. That means 20 degrees where you get very imprecise, jerky movements. Not ideal for racing games. You can set the deadspace in-game to compensate, but then you don’t get any movement at all up until that point where the wheel catches the gears. It’s not any better. I’ve got “center spring strength” set to 100. This determine how heavy the resistance is, and how quickly the wheel returns to “center” when you let go of it. Again though, it never returns to center because the middle is loose. So it returns anywhere from 4-10 degrees on either side. Just too inaccurate for racing titles. Works good on slow-paced drivers, like American Truck Simulator.
ORIGINAL REVIEW: First things first, I was waiting by my front door when the Amazon delivery guy came. He slammed the box on the concrete step in front on my porch. Didn’t drop it, didn’t “whoops! Slipped a bit!” Just straight up slammed it down. I had my door open and was standing there, but the screen was closed, so I’m guessing he didn’t see me or he probably wouldn’t have done that. I said, “Well… thaaanks…” in response and he just turned around and walked away. Reason for bringing that up is this wheel has no protection inside. The actual wheel rests on the bottom of the box, and even with an outer box it’s pretty much taking the full force of any impact. Unfortunately, in this case it was the side that got slammed down.
WHEEL: With that out of the way the wheel has a pretty major dead zone in the middle. I’m not sure if it’s Logitech or fault or the delivery guy’s now. Doing a bit of research it has seemed to happen to some people and not others. But basically when the wheel rests at center it’s always off by a few degrees. There’s no resistance for 2-3 degrees. In-game that means any slight movement left or right causes wobbles, which makes it hard to be as accurate as you want to be while driving straight. I’ve spent probably 3 or 4 hours messing with settings in-game, in Windows and on Logitech’s (crappy) software to get it as good as I can. It’s not perfect, but it useable. Honestly though, at this price point it’s hard to expect perfect. This is definitely an entry-level set up.
I do love the force-feedback though. I had a wheel when I was a kid (Gran Turismo 1 days), and it wasn’t as technologically advanced. There was no resistance when you turn so it wasn’t as easy to judge corners, and everything was plastic and cheap. This one is nice because you can feel the resistance on the road enough to lock yourself into banks, allowing for more precise cornering than you’ll ever get with a controller. There’s weight to the wheel itself, but it also gives the vehicles weight as well.
PEDALS: The pedals are nice. Everything stays planted and doesn’t slip around when you’re pressing them. In fact, if your chair has wheels you’re more likely to push yourself backwards than you are to push the pedals forward.
The accelerator feels smooth and responsive. And there are settings in games to let you adjust it even further. Playing Forza 7 I took the initial dead one down to zero so as soon as I touch the pedal the car starts moving.
The brake is as stiff as the reviews say. I had to turn the end deadzone (where it considers the pedal fully pressed) from 100 down to 70. Otherwise you’re pretty much having to put all your weight into it if you want to brake fully. Basically, on default settings if you push the brake all the way down, it only reads as 75% breaking power, so you have to push even further than that to get it to register 100. It feels very unnatural. Even turning the brake sensitivity up to max in Logitech’s software doesn’t really help. But if you calibrate it in Windows game controller settings it will bring it down some… and then of course, messing with the in-game settings as well.
So basically to really tune this thing you’re changing options in 3 different places. To make things worse these problems get exaggerated the faster the car is that you’re driving. So the steering wheel center wobble becomes more and more touchy the faster you’re going.
Clutch feels good. It’s about as easy to press as the accelerator.
SHIFTER: I bought the shifter bundle. It feels like a toy, honestly. Very small, and the throws are tiny. I’ve mostly been using the paddle shifters and those feel perfect. The clicks are satisfying, but they also feel light and responsive.
SET UP: This was a pain in the ass to set up properly. I had G Hub on my computer already. It tried to update when I opened it and I got an instant blue screen of death. After a restart I attempted to uninstall it. It kept saying uninstall successfull but it never actually left my computer. So I had to jump through a bunch of hoops on Logitech’s forums and delete hidden folders.. but it still wasn’t uninstalled lol. I reinstalled it anyway and it repaired the corrupted files, and I finally got it to register the wheel. After that, as I mentioned, it was just a bunch of fine-tuning.
Quality: Overall quality is good. I spent $400 total with CA inflated tax prices. The wheel and pedals were $250 or so. I think that’s around the right ball park for what you’re getting and the quality. It’s not the best, but it’s not cheap plastic either (at least not the parts that matter).
Overall this beats a controller by miles, but don’t expect it to be completely useable straight out of the box. Take the time to set it up and fine tune and you’ll be fine.
Will update as time goes on. For all I know this thing is a ticking time bomb after being slammed on the ground the way it was. Hoping it doesn’t quit right outside of warranty.
jacques toussaint –
Très réaliste et performant
Kimberly DuVall –
Easy to install. One thing to be aware of …the steering wheel and controller operate on separate power sources.
If you can’t steer, but all the buttons work, then the steering wheel likely isn’t plugged into its power source. You’ll read a lot of nonsense about needing to calibrate if the car keeps veering into the wall at the start. Maybe you should calibrate…later. But first you have to plug the power source into an electrical outlet. Ask me how I know. (Insert raised eyebrow emoji here.)
Raymond Sun –
I got this on sale a while back while I was traveling but had it delivered back home for when I got back. I was pleasantly impressed when I got it because I used to race on controllers and felt the need to upgrade to a gaming wheel. The wheel itself has feet (which are detachable) on the bottom that are used to screw down the wheel to a table so the wheel doesn’t move when racing. The paddle shifters are responsive with a nice “clicky” sound and the wheel itself is metal in the center with a leather feel on the circumference of the wheel. The pedals are responsive and have all 3 pedals (Accelerator, Brake, and Clutch). My one gripe is that the brake pedal has very little travel before reaching an insane amount of resistance to get to 100% brake pressure which causes the whole pedal housing to slide (on carpet). The wheel pairs well with the Logitech G Hub program though and can have individual game settings applied when starting up a game. IE: Restricting wheel movement to 360 degrees for F1, 450 degrees for a GT Car, and 900 degrees for a normal car. I play a mixture of F1, Asetto Corsa, and Dirt Rally so having game specific settings is really nice to have.