Circuit Superstars’ racing arcade-meets-sim design has a family history

They knew from the beginning that they would make a race video game. Take a glance at their family photos, and it’s easy to see why.

There’s their granddad, beaming alongside the “Faccia Feroce,” a single-seater race car he built in the 1950s. (It’s Italian for “fierce face.”) And here’s their uncle Daniel, with father, Carlos, introducing the Mastretta MXT, Mexico’s first showpiece sports car. And here’s Alberto, creator of Circuit SuperstarsCarolina, his sister and co-founder of the studio, is standing beside him as he navigates around a tire barrier in his Formula A 125cc Formula A Kart.

“We say the game is ‘by racing fans for racing fans,’” Carolina told Polygon, “but I think people would love to know what we mean by that.”

It would explain the “sim-meets-arcade” approach that Carolina, Alberto, and their brother Carlos Mastretta have taken with Circuit Superstars, A top-down racing game that was launched on Steam last fall and Xbox One and made its debut two weeks ago on PlayStation 4.

The “arcade” portion is simply what the Mastrettas’ studio, Original Fire Games, can handle, visually, with a full-time staff of just six. The “sim” component — realistic physics and handling; tire wear and fueling — comes from the Mastretta family’s combined experience designing and racing high-performance vehicles themselves.

“You can preserve a lot of the traits and qualities of the entertainment that motorsport brings, without having to go to a full simulation,” Alberto Mastretta said, in an interview shortly after Circuit Superstars’ PS4 launch. “So that’s what we did. We respect a lot of motorsports’ rules and aspects that make it exciting, such as pit stops and qualifying. Getting pole position, you know, making a good first lap.”

a single-seater, front-engine, 1950s style custom roadster painted in red

La “faccia feroce!” Built by the elder Carlos Mastretta in the 1950s. Daniel and Carlos, their sons, also created the MXT sports coupe made in Mexico from 2011 to 2014.
Carolina Mastretta provided the photo

Circuit Superstars, published by Square Enix Collective, the company’s marquee for indie games, launched in early access on PC a year ago. Players and fans usually start their descriptions of the game — “Micro Machines” is always a reference — by focusing on its aesthetic. But it’s a legitimately challenging racer, with the kind of stable, muscle-memory traction and handling model that video game drivers can feel in the bigger boys, like the WRC or F1 series.

There’s local and online multiplayer, and single-player events against bot fields on a variety of tracks. But even Circuit SuperstarsPerfectionists can be kept on track for as many laps as they like, believing that they could still cut another tenth or so off. From the top, one can imagine that you are driving an RC car rather than being behind it. But that’s also intentional, as Carlos and Alberto also raced RC vehicles competitively, to go along with their four-wheel careers.

“We felt there was space for a detailed, modern, top-down racing game that gave you the same feeling of flow and focus that you get in RC racing, which is something we love,” Carlos Mastretta said. “This way, we wouldn’t get into the hyper-developed type of racing game, which, obviously, would have been very difficult as a new studio.”

Carlos and Alberto began to experiment with their racer vision back in 2015. Carlos stated that this was around when Carolina was serving as the design lead. Age of Empires 4 Relic Entertainment. Square Enix offered the brothers a trial of their product, which they were able to demo thanks to her industry expertise and advise. Circuit Superstars It would be.

a helmeted driver pulls on his racing gloves before taking a seat on a Formula A kart

Original Fire Games’ Carlos and Alberto Mastretta both have competitive racing backgrounds.
Carolina Mastretta provided the photo

Square and Mastrettas started their partnership in 2019, when Carolina was brought over to be its co-founder and site executive. Two of Carolina’s colleagues from Relic — engineers Philip Wardlaw and John Werner — soon came aboard, too. Original Fire Games, which is also located in British Columbia where Alberto learned game design at Vancouver Film School, has its headquarters.

“From early access, and all of last year, it was like a constant learning mode, and the integration of [that] learning, and slowly improving things,” Carolina said of development — particularly with regard to port forwarding and netcode, where Original Fire hired on contractors, she said. “I think it was really good that we got ourselves on [Steam]Because Early Access allowed us to take an iterative and flexible approach. [Circuit Superstars]; that we’re playing with the community, learning, and investigating, and integrating those lessons and improving it over time.”

Circuit SuperstarsWith its October launch of the full version, it received critical acclaim. Part of the success, Alberto said, came from avoiding design rabbit holes and experiments with extraneous features or gameplay mechanisms, to remain focused on the core satisfaction of racing the cars they’d designed. “You feel like you have a really grounded car, and a car that you believe in,” said Alberto, speaking like a bona fide competitive driver. “The feedback, even from that [perspective] allows you to push, and have a really close experience, like you’re actually driving the car and finding its limit.”

Though they wouldn’t call Circuit Superstars a live-service game, yet, the Mastrettas have plans for additional content and title updates, both to expand the game’s offerings and accommodate the expectations of its big-tent player base. Circuit Superstars’ biggest hit appears to be the Top Gear Time Attack, a branded mode featuring the BBC show’s test track and “The Stig,” its anonymous test driver. That’s where Square Enix’s muscle came in; the BBC was looking to partner Top Gear With a videogame, the suits were able to make a deal.

high performance touring cars on a back straight in late afternoon in Circuit Superstars

Original Fire Games/Square Enix image

“We feel that a particular pain point our players have faced when they enter the game, they see the stylization, and they feel like the game is more challenging than they were expecting,” Alberto acknowledged. “That has had a lot to do with the interaction between cars, so we’ve made improvements there for future patches. We’re still trying to find that perfect balance of what the game looks like and what it feels like to play.”

Circuit Superstars won’t, however, try to get more sophisticated or complex. Alberto briefly considered adding a manual transmission to the game, then backed off, figuring many players wouldn’t enjoy changing gears on a gamepad. Racing setups or tuning also aren’t on the whiteboard, as they get in the way of pick-up-and-play expectations.

However, Mastrettas have a strong commitment to post-launch support for vehicles and additional modes of play. Vehicles in particular. With Circuit Superstars now launched on two consoles and PC, Carolina has a couple ideas for DLC vehicles — ones already designed by Mastrettas.

“The Faccia Feroce was donated to a museum in Puebla (Mexico), where our dad is from,” she said. “I think sometimes it gets added to an expo attached to the Carrera Panamericana. It would be great to have both of these cars. Circuit Superstars. I think we will do it as a gift to our dad sometime this year.”

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