Keep your eyes on the taillights and your foot to the floor, welcome to the Shutoko, the neon-drenched heart of Japan’s urban racing underground. This isn't just a highway; it's a sprawling, high-speed labyrinth carved through the vertical canyons of Tokyo. Part of the legendary Shuto Expressway, this is where the Mid Night Club forged its legend, and where you’ll find the ultimate test of nerve, traffic management, and top-end speed.
Spanning over 100 kilometres of meticulously recreated asphalt, the Shutoko Revival Project (SRP) is a love letter to the '90s and 2000s street racing scene. It is a technical masterpiece of elevation changes, narrow lanes, and blind sweepers.
The C1 Inner Loop: The iconic circular heart of the system. It’s tight, technical, and relentless, demanding surgical precision as you thread the needle between bridge pillars and guardrails.
The Wangan (Bayshore Route): The legendary 'straight' that stretches toward Yokohama. This is where horsepower is king—a flat-out, multi-lane drag where cars reach speeds exceeding 340 km/h against the backdrop of the Tokyo Bay.
The Rainbow Bridge: A breathtaking high-speed transit across the water, offering one of the most cinematic views in sim racing before plunging back into the dense urban grid.
Daikoku Futo: The spiritual home of JDM culture. More than just a parking area, this iconic rest stop serves as the starting point for countless battles and the ultimate meeting ground for the world’s finest machinery.
Keep an eye on your fuel and watch for the mist. Welcome to the Highlands. This is Glen Shiel, the absolute titan of Assetto Corsa free-roam. Nestled in the Northwest Highlands of Scotland, this isn't just a track, it’s a staggering 1,000-kilometre network of open asphalt that brings the 'Forza Horizon' scale to the world of simulation. From the mist-covered peaks of the Five Sisters of Kintail to the winding shores of Loch Duich, Glen Shiel is a love letter to the raw, untamed beauty of the Scottish wilderness.
Created by Grant Henry, this map is legendary for its sheer size and variety. It blends real-world topography from the A87 corridor with fictional stretches designed to push your car to its absolute limits, whether you’re chasing top speeds on widened highways or navigating treacherous, narrow B-roads.
The A87 Corridor: The backbone of the map, mimicking the real-life scenic route from the Cluanie Inn to Shiel Bridge. It’s a high-speed artery cut through a classic U-shaped glacial valley, offering sweeping curves and relentless elevation.
The Five Sisters (Kintail): Towering over the northern side of the glen, these iconic peaks provide a dramatic, vertical backdrop. The mountain roads here offer terrifying drops and cinematic vistas that illustrate the true verticality of the mod.
The Jacobite Legacy: You’ll race past the site of the Battle of Glen Shiel (1719), the last engagement of foreign troops on British soil. Look out for the 'Peak of the Spaniards' (Sgurr nan Spainteach) as you fly through the valley floor.
Hidden 'Easter Eggs': Tucked within the 600+ miles of road are over a dozen hidden tracks, including recreations of famous circuits like Ebisu and Knockhill, rewarding those brave enough to explore the furthest reaches of the map.
Welcome to the Santa Monica Mountains, the ultimate sun-drenched playground for Southern California’s canyon carvers. Spanning the rugged terrain between Los Angeles and Malibu, this massive photogrammetry-based project recreates the most iconic driving roads in the world with staggering accuracy. This is where the 'canyon run' isn't just a hobby—it’s a religion, set against a backdrop of golden hills, deep valleys, and the distant Pacific horizon.
This map is a technical marvel, built using real-world 360° data to capture every bump, crack, and camber change in the asphalt. It offers an immersive, high-fidelity experience that makes you feel the true grit of the California canyon floor.
The Snake (Mulholland Highway): The most infamous stretch of asphalt in the world. Famous for its technical hairpins and the 'lookout' corner that has claimed countless over-eager riders and drivers, it’s a high-stakes test of precision and throttle control.
Stunt, Piuma, and Tuna Canyon: The core 'legs' of the network. Stunt Road offers high-speed, flowing sweepers, while Tuna Canyon is a terrifyingly narrow, one-way downhill plummet toward the coast that rewards the brave and punishes the reckless.
Saddle Peak: The highest point of the map, sitting at 2,300 feet. It serves as a central hub connecting the various canyons, offering breathtaking views before you commit to your next downhill descent.
Malibu Canyon Free-Roam: With over 20 miles of meticulously detailed roads and support for two-way AI traffic, this is the premier destination for 'cutting up' through traffic or simply cruising into the Malibu sunset.
Welcome to LA Canyons, the definitive open-world masterpiece of the California hills. Stretching across 42 kilometres of ribbon-like asphalt, this isn't just a track; it’s a high-fidelity tribute to the legendary 'Canyon Carvers' of Los Angeles. From the high-speed sweepers of the Angeles Crest Highway to the tight, technical guts of Upper Big Tujunga, this is where the city's noise fades and the engine’s roar takes over.
Based on real-world LiDAR data, LA Canyons offers a level of topographical accuracy that makes every dip and camber change feel alive. It is a world of massive scale, designed for everything from chill sunset cruises to high-stakes 'Touge' battles.
Angeles Crest Highway (The Crest): The spine of the map. A sprawling, high-elevation masterpiece that flows through the San Gabriel Mountains. It’s a place for high-speed momentum and finding your rhythm amongst the clouds.
Upper Big Tujunga (Upper Big T): The technical heart of the canyons. Known for its perfect banking and rapid-fire transitions, it’s the ultimate playground for testing a car's balance and your own reflexes.
Mount Wilson Observatory: The literal peak of the experience. The climb to the summit offers some of the most breathtaking verticality in sim racing, overlooking the vast sprawl of the Los Angeles basin.
The 'Double Loop' and Beyond: With multiple layouts including the Main Loop and the massive 90km 'Platinum' expansion, the sheer variety of roads ensures you’ll never take the same line twice.
Welcome to the Pacific Coast Highway, the ultimate sun-soaked escape and the most iconic ribbon of asphalt in the American West. Stretching along the rugged California coastline, this Assetto Corsa masterpiece captures the legendary State Route 1 in all its glory. It’s a high-speed journey through the salt air, where the roar of your engine competes only with the crashing waves of the Pacific.
Meticulously crafted by Phoenix77, this 23-kilometre point-to-point stretch offers a breathtaking sense of scale. It’s a road built for grand tourers and top-down cruising, blending long, flowing sweepers with technical cliffside sections that leave zero room for error.
The Bixby Creek Bridge: The crown jewel of the route. This architectural marvel spans a deep canyon, offering one of the most cinematic vistas in sim racing as you fly across its concrete arches high above the surf.
The Big Sur Coastline: A relentless sequence of elevation changes and high-speed curves carved directly into the mountainside. One wrong move here doesn't just mean a DNF—it means a plunge into the ocean.
The Redwood Canopies: The track ducks inland through dense, shaded groves where the light filters through the trees, challenging your vision as you transition from the bright coastal sun to the deep shadows of the forest.
Point Lobos & Beyond: From the jagged rocks of the shoreline to the rolling hills of Central California, every kilometre is a postcard-perfect recreation of the 'All-American Road.'
Welcome to the FDR Drive, Manhattan’s most chaotic and cinematic waterfront gauntlet. Stretching nearly 10 miles along the East River, this limited-access parkway is a high-speed paradox: a vital artery for the city that feels like a precision flight path through a concrete jungle. In Assetto Corsa, it’s the ultimate "No Hesi" playground, where narrow lanes, sudden tunnels, and the iconic NYC skyline create a relentless, high-stakes flow.
The FDR is a masterclass in urban engineering, weaving above, below, and even through the architecture of Manhattan. It’s a road of rhythm and reaction, where the lighting shifts from blinding sun to neon tunnel-glow in seconds.
South Street Viaduct & The Bridges: Launching from the Financial District, you’ll tear across the elevated viaduct with the massive steel spans of the Brooklyn, Manhattan, and Williamsburg Bridges looming overhead. It’s a wide-open start, but the technicality ramps up as the skyscrapers close in.
The Bristol Basin (Rubble Section): Between 23rd and 34th Streets, you’re literally driving on history. This stretch was built using rubble from Bristol, England, shipped over after the WWII Blitz—now a high-speed straightaway passing the Waterside Plaza towers.
United Nations & Sutton Place Tunnels: Experience the "barrel roll" of Manhattan infrastructure. The road dips under the UN Headquarters before entering the double-decker Sutton Place Tunnel, where the southbound lanes are stacked directly on top of the northbound ones.
The Carl Schurz Park Underpass: Near 90th Street, the road vanishes beneath the gardens of Gracie Mansion, the Mayor's residence. This enclosed section demands perfect throttle control as you navigate the narrow, curved tunnel before emerging into the Upper East Side.
The RFK Bridge Interchange: The final sprint through East Harlem brings you to the massive interchange for the Robert F. Kennedy (Triborough) Bridge. It’s the gatekeeper to the Bronx, where the FDR ends and the Harlem River Drive begins.
Welcome to Mulholland Drive, the legendary 'Snake' that carves a high-stakes path across the spine of the Santa Monica Mountains. This isn't just a road; it’s the spiritual home of California’s underground canyon culture. Stretching from the glitz of Hollywood to the rugged peaks of Leo Carrillo, Mulholland offers a cinematic, high-fidelity experience where every off-camber turn tells a story of late-night runs and automotive obsession. Whether you’re chasing a ghost from the 70s or testing a modern supercar's limits, this is the ultimate proving ground for those who live for the corner.
Designed for the technical purist, Mulholland Drive is a relentless sequence of elevation changes, blind crests, and tightening radii. It’s a map that demands total focus—where the barrier between a perfect line and a sheer drop-off is often just a few inches of asphalt.
The Snake (Edwards Corner): The world-famous gauntlet. This tight, technical section is a haven for spectators and photographers, featuring a series of low-speed, high-intensity hairpins that reward perfect weight transfer and surgical precision.
The Overlooks: High-speed stretches punctuated by iconic viewpoints. These segments offer a brief moment to breathe and take in the Los Angeles skyline before diving back into the rhythmic, flowing sweepers that define the ridge-line.
The Rock Store: The legendary waypoint for canyon carvers. This mid-run landmark serves as the hub for the local scene, providing the perfect starting point for downhill sprints or uphill battles against the ticking clock.
The Hidden Spurs: Beyond the main asphalt, discover the narrow, sun-cracked access roads and fire trails that branch off the ridge. These bumpy, forgotten paths offer a raw, unrefined challenge for drivers who prefer grit over glamour.
Eyes on the apex and watch for traffic. This is Arrabassada! Welcome to La Rabassada, the infamous mountain pass that has served as Barcelona’s high-speed escape for over a century. Connecting the heart of the city to Sant Cugat del Vallès, this winding stretch of the BP-1417 is a legendary 'hill climb' that snakes through the dense forests of the Collserola mountain range. It’s a road where the ghosts of early 20th-century racing meet the neon-lit world of modern underground car culture.
Known as much for its breathtaking views of the Mediterranean as for its technical difficulty, Arrabassada is a high-stakes ribbon of asphalt that demands respect. Whether you are fighting for a leaderboard time or linking hairpins in a drift build, the narrow lanes and unforgiving guardrails leave zero room for error.
The Historic Hill Climb: This route was the site of the famous Subida a la Rabassada, a race that began in the early 1900s and became a staple of the Spanish Mountain Championship.
The Ruins of the Grand Casino: Halfway through the ascent, you’ll pass the haunting remains of the Gran Casino de la Arrabassada—once an opulent luxury resort and theme park, now a silent witness to the speed of passing cars.
The Belvedere Sweepers: Fast, flowing curves that offer cinematic glimpses of Mount Tibidabo and the Sagrada Família before diving back into the shadows of the pines.
Winding Topography: A 5-kilometre ascent with an average grade of nearly 5%, featuring tight hairpins and blind, off-camber transitions that test a car's balance and your ability to carry momentum.
Welcome to Bella Vista, a massive, high-fidelity free-roam masterpiece that brings over 250 kilometres of diverse South American-inspired roads to your fingertips. This isn't just a track—it’s a living, breathing world where the sun-drenched valleys meet rugged mountain peaks. Whether you’re shredding tires in an industrial park or embarking on a long-distance coastal cruise, Bella Vista is the ultimate playground for those who believe the best racing happens beyond the guardrails.
Designed for pure exploration, Bella Vista is a technical marvel that features everything from high-speed highways to treacherous gravel paths. It’s a map that demands you keep an eye on your fuel gauge and your wits about you as you navigate its sprawling, interconnected network.
The Bella Vista Highway: A relentless, high-speed artery perfect for testing top-end gear. With long, sweeping stretches and two-way AI traffic, it’s the heart of the region's transit and a prime spot for high-stakes 'cut up' runs.
The Industrial Park: The spiritual home for drifters. This dedicated zone is a haven for burning rubber, offering wide-open asphalt and technical sections designed specifically for linking high-angle slides and tandem battles.
Bella Vista Mountain Lodge: A scenic ascent that trades speed for precision. The winding mountain pass leads you to a secluded retreat, offering tight hairpins and breathtaking verticality that rewards smooth, rhythmic driving.
Trauman’s Trail & Offroad Club: For those who aren't afraid of a little dirt, these gravel and extreme off-road routes offer over 20 kilometres of bumpy, technical terrain. It’s a true test of suspension and rally-bred machinery in the heart of the wild.
Welcome to Union Island, a breathtaking tropical paradise where the crystal-clear waters of the Caribbean meet the high-octane world of street racing. Located in the southern tip of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, this 1:1 scale recreation is a masterpiece of environmental storytelling. It’s a place where the relaxed island vibe is shattered by the roar of engines echoing through the volcanic peaks of Mount Taboi.
Meticulously crafted by the Fat-Alfie team, this map is a technical triumph, featuring 15 kilometres of winding coastal roads and narrow village streets. It captures the raw, unpolished beauty of the Caribbean, from the sun-bleached asphalt to the dense tropical flora that crowds the track’s edge.
Clifton & Ashton: The island’s vibrant hubs. These sections challenge you with tight, 90-degree urban turns and narrow corridors where a single mistake will put you into a colourful storefront or a stone wall.
The Coastal Run: A high-speed blast along the turquoise shoreline. It’s a rhythmic section that flows with the natural curvature of the beaches, offering stunning views of the surrounding Grenadine islands if you dare to look away from the apex.
Mount Taboi Ascent: The island’s spine. The roads here become steep and technical, snaking up the volcanic hillsides with blind crests and off-camber hairpins that test your car’s suspension and your own bravery.
The Airport Straight: A rare moment of flat-out speed. Rushing past the Union Island airport, this stretch provides the perfect opportunity to slipstream opponents before diving back into the technical jungle sections.
Welcome to Paradise City, the ultimate urban playground where the grass is green, the girls are pretty, and every intersection is a potential masterpiece of twisted metal. This legendary port from the arcade classic brings the high-octane chaos of Criterion’s world into the physics-driven realism of Assetto Corsa. It’s a city built for one thing: the 'Rules of the Road', and those rules were made to be broken.
Spanning a massive, interconnected network of urban streets, coastal highways, and mountain passes, this fictional metropolis is a nostalgic trip for some and a lethal challenge for all. From the neon-lit downtown to the dusty hills of the outback, Paradise City is a relentless, 360-degree racing arena.
Angus Wharf & The Navy Yard: The industrial heart of the city. Tight, warehouse-lined corridors and shipyard docks create a technical maze where precision is the difference between a clean line and a total wreck.
The Big Surf Coastline: A high-speed, sun-soaked run along the Pacific. This is where you let the engine breathe, flying across scenic bridges and past the iconic boardwalks that define the city's coastal vibe.
White Mountain: The high-altitude escape. These winding, cliffside roads offer massive elevation changes and terrifying drops, demanding perfect throttle control as you navigate the 'dead man's curves' overlooking the skyline.
Wildcats Stadium & Downtown: The chaotic center. Surrounded by skyscrapers and elevated rail lines, the grid-based streets of the financial district are perfect for high-speed chases and 'cutting up' through the dense urban sprawl.