A new racing game is the perfect excuse to finally fix your sim setup. Tokyo Xtreme Racer is about rhythm and repeatability. If your seat, shifter or handbrake position changes even slightly, your transitions get messy.
Release note: Tokyo Xtreme Racer was released Early Access Jan 22, 2025 (full release Sep 24, 2025)
This guide matches the game to the hardware: which cockpit makes sense, which seat style fits the driving, and how to think about monitor placement without overcomplicating it.
Key takeaways for Tokyo Xtreme Racer
- Drifting is about repeatability. Lock your seat and shifter positions before chasing settings.
- A rigid cockpit makes countersteer feel cleaner and more predictable.
- Single screen can be great — as long as you bring it close enough and set the right height.
Wheelbase, pedals and controller choice (and why your cockpit matters)
Tokyo Xtreme Racer will run on anything from an entry-level gear-driven wheel to a 20+ Nm direct drive wheelbase. The key is matching the cockpit to the forces you’re generating.
- Entry wheels (Logitech G29/G923, Thrustmaster T248/T300) work best when the wheel mount doesn’t bounce or flex.
- Mid-range direct drive (Fanatec CSL DD, Moza R9/R12, Asetek La Prima) benefits from a rigid 8020 cockpit so the force feedback stays clean.
- High-end direct drive (Simucube 2, Fanatec DD1/DD2, Asetek Invicta) really wants a stiff chassis and a strong pedal deck — otherwise you feel flex instead of detail.
- If you use a load-cell brake, cockpit stiffness often improves lap time more than upgrading wheel torque.
Cockpit choice: the part that makes everything else feel better
In drift and street racing, you build muscle memory for transitions. A cockpit that moves changes your shifter and handbrake reach every time — which is the fastest way to make a good run feel random.
Rig picks from SimXPro
- X80 GT Sim Racing Cockpit – Strong enough for aggressive transitions and for mounting a shifter + handbrake where you want it.
- XT120 GT Sim Racing Cockpit – If you want a rock-solid shifter/handbrake feel with zero wiggle, go heavier.
- GT - RS GT Sim Racing Cockpit – A clean GT-style cockpit option that works well for street, drift and “daily driver” style games.
Seat setup: your “driving position” is a performance setting
Rally and drift reward fast hands. You generally want a slightly more upright GT-style posture so your arms can work freely and your elbows don’t hit the seat bolsters.
- Adjust the seat so your wrists can rest on top of the wheel with relaxed shoulders.
- Make sure the handbrake and shifter are reachable without leaning forward.
- Lock the seat rails tight — small seat movement destroys muscle memory.
Seat picks that pair well with this style of game
- Torq GT Seat – A GT bucket that supports quick arm movement without forcing a super-reclined position.
- Basic Leather Reclining Seat + Slider – Comfort + adjustability if you’re playing for hours and prefer a more relaxed posture.
Monitor setup: the fastest “feel” upgrade after a solid rig
Street and drift games often look best in cockpit/hood cam. Your monitor height influences how “flat” or “3D” the road feels. Start with the monitor centred to your eye line and tweak from there.
Monitor stand options
- Single screen stand tiltable - VESA 100/200 – Street racers often use cockpit/hood cam—single monitor height and distance matters a lot.
- Light Triple screen setup VESA 75 - 100 – Triples are great if you love door-to-door battles and want more side vision.
In-game settings worth checking (before you blame your hardware)
These settings take 5–10 minutes and usually fix 80% of the “something feels off” complaints:
- Steering rotation: drifting often feels best with higher rotation and a quick rack response.
- FFB smoothing/damping: too much can make transitions feel slow and vague.
- Handbrake axis: set a clean on/off or progressive pull depending on your style.
- Camera: a stable chase cam can look cool, but cockpit/hood cam builds better consistency.
Accessories that actually make a difference
For Tokyo Xtreme Racer, these are the add-ons that tend to improve the experience the most:
- A shifter in the correct location for your dominant hand.
- A handbrake that doesn’t wobble (especially with aggressive pulls).
- A button box or Stream Deck if you love quick camera and reset controls.
Quick checklist before your first serious session
- Calibrate wheel rotation and pedal travel in-game (do this once, then stop chasing it).
- Set your seat distance so you can fully press the brake without locking your knee.
- Bring the monitor closer than you think, then lower it slightly so your eyes look at the horizon naturally.
- Do 10 minutes of slow laps to build muscle memory before pushing for a hotlap.
A simple SimXPro build that works (and how to upgrade it)
- Cockpit: X80 GT Sim Racing Cockpit
- Seat: Torq GT Seat
- Monitor stand: Single screen stand tiltable - VESA 100/200
If you want a clear upgrade path: start by locking in your posture (seat + pedals), then upgrade rigidity (cockpit), then expand your view (monitor setup).





Share:
Assetto Corsa EVO vs Le Mans Ultimate: Choosing one rig for both sims
Wreckfest 2 setup guide: Cockpit and seat tips for full Contact Racing