The quick pick by use case
If you race on PlayStation 5, the answer is a Fanatec Podium DD or a Fanatec GT DD Pro. Sony's licensing is the moat and nothing else competes seriously on PS5 in 2026.
If you race on Xbox, your shortlist is Fanatec (CSL DD, ClubSport DD, Podium DD-25). Moza and Simagic have no Xbox license at all. Simucube and Asetek are PC only.
If you race on PC, the answer depends on budget. The Moza R range is the value play across every tier. Simagic Alpha EVO wins on signal smoothness. Simucube's SC2 Pro and SC3 Pro win on software depth and six-year ownership signal. Asetek wins on physical build quality.
Best direct drive wheel overall in 2026
The pick
Still the smartest 12Nm buy on PC, and the V2 refresh adds a 21-bit encoder, better thermals and the NexGen 4.0 algorithm without raising the price.
$429 / £339 The Moza R12 V2 is the wheelbase I would push at most new PC sim racers in 2026, and it is the answer most reviewers in the corpus reach when asked the same question. Twelve newton-metres of peak torque is enough headroom for everything most drivers actually race; the Pit House software has matured enough to close most of the gap to True Drive; and the ladder above the R12 V2 in the Moza line is the cleanest upgrade path in sim racing. You can grow from an R12 V2 to an R16 V2 to an R21 V2 to an R25 Ultra without changing rims, pedals or workflow.
The honest caveat is the Moza R12 V2 has no console story. PC only. Console drivers should skip straight to the Fanatec picks below.
Best direct drive wheel for PS5 in 2026
The only direct-drive wheelbase that's officially licensed for PlayStation. Same chassis as the CSL DD, but with the PS firmware and Boost Kit 180 in the box.
$600 / £474
Fanatec's PS5-licensed flagship at 20 Nm. The base for serious console drivers and the answer for Fanatec ecosystem owners who want flagship torque without the Podium DD2 hunt.
$1000 / £790
Fanatec back at the top of the market. 25 Nm, the same QR2 ecosystem, and the only PS5-licensed flagship direct drive on the planet.
$1200 / £948 Fanatec is the only credible PlayStation flagship route in 2026. The GT DD Pro 8 is the entry rung that brought direct drive down to PS5-compatible money in the first place, co-developed with Polyphony Digital for Gran Turismo 7. The Podium DD1 is the licensed flagship at 20 Nm. The Podium DD-25 is the absolute top of the PS5-licensed market at 25 Nm.
The Logitech G PRO Racing Wheel and the newer G RS50 are the only direct rivals on PS5 in 2026, and the Thrustmaster T598 is the closest spec-sheet equivalent at the entry tier. None of them have the depth of the Fanatec rim catalogue, and that matters more than the spec sheet once you start upgrading.
Best direct drive wheel for Xbox in 2026
The wheelbase that finally killed gear and belt drive at the entry tier. Boosted with the 8Nm PSU it punches well above its price.
$300 / £237
Fanatec's mid-tier direct drive at 12 Nm - the upgrade buy from the CSL DD when you want the same ecosystem with proper torque and a better chassis.
$700 / £553
Fifteen Newton-metres of Fanatec direct drive on the same QR2 that runs across the modern Fanatec line. The upgrade buy from the ClubSport DD 12 when you want more peak torque without leaving the ecosystem.
$900 / £711 Fanatec is the only brand with a real Xbox story across the whole direct drive range. The base itself is PC and Xbox capable; Xbox compatibility comes through the rim, so you need an Xbox-licensed Fanatec wheel like the ClubSport GT3 for Xbox or the CSL Elite WRC. The CSL DD 8 is the entry pick, the ClubSport DD 12 is the mid-tier step up, and the ClubSport DD+ is the upper-mid pick for drivers who want more than 12 Nm without going Podium.
The honest read for Xbox racers in 2026: if Fanatec specifically doesn't appeal, the Logitech G PRO Racing Wheel is the only other credible Xbox-compatible direct drive option, and it costs roughly double what an equivalent Fanatec setup costs. Moza, Simagic, Simucube and Asetek have no Xbox license at any tier.
Best budget direct drive wheel under £500
The cheapest direct-drive base in the Fanatec catalogue. Same chassis as the CSL DD 8, smaller PSU, and most reviewers say you'll regret skipping the Boost Kit.
$400 / £316
The cheapest way into Simagic's 21-bit encoder, and the base that drags the entry tier upmarket.
$399 / £315
The base that proved 9 Nm and PC-only could compete with Fanatec on price and beat it on ecosystem depth.
$329 / £260 Three real picks at the budget end and they are different answers for different buyers. The Fanatec CSL DD 5 is the cheapest entry into the Fanatec catalogue on Xbox and PC, but almost every long-term owner ends up adding the Boost Kit 180 to make it the 8 Nm version anyway. The Simagic Alpha EVO Sport 9 is the surprise pick: at $399 / £315 you get Simagic's 21-bit encoder and active cooling at money the rest of the entry tier cannot match. The Moza R9 V3 is the value play with the longest upgrade ladder above it.
Best mid-tier direct drive wheel (12 Nm class)
12Nm of well-engineered direct drive at the price of a base-tier wheelbase. The mid-tier value pick that made the rest of the market sit up.
$429 / £339
Simagic's answer to the Moza R12 V2: a 12 Nm 5-pole servo with active cooling and zero-cogging tuning that most reviewers say is the smoothest signal in the mid tier.
$519 / £410
Fanatec's mid-tier direct drive at 12 Nm - the upgrade buy from the CSL DD when you want the same ecosystem with proper torque and a better chassis.
$700 / £553 Twelve newton-metres is the sweet spot for most PC sim racers. The three live contenders trade differently. Moza R12 V2 is the value pick and the upgrade-ladder pick. Simagic Alpha EVO 12 is the refinement pick: active cooling and 5-pole servo signal cleanliness in long stints. Fanatec ClubSport DD 12 is the ecosystem pick if you already own QR2 rims or you need Xbox compatibility.
Best upper-mid direct drive wheel (16-18 Nm class)
Sixteen Newton-metres of Moza torque at the price most brands charge for twelve. The upper-mid base that turned the R-range into a real ladder.
$699 / £552
The 17 Nm entry point into the Simucube ecosystem. The base that gets you True Drive and category-leading build quality at the lowest possible Simucube price.
$1109 / £876
The 17 Nm entry point into the new Simucube 3 line. Refined motor electronics, the same True Drive software as the Pro, at the lowest possible SC3 price.
$1500 / £1185
18 Nm of Asetek industrial servo. The middle rung of the Danish engineering-led DD line and the Asetek base most serious sim racers actually buy.
The upper-mid tier is where the value-versus-refinement decision becomes most honest. The Moza R16 V2 is the spreadsheet winner at this torque tier by a wide margin. The Simucube 2 Sport and the SC3 Sport are the Simucube entries that get you True Drive software depth and the six-year ownership story of the SC2 line. The Asetek Forte is the Danish-engineered industrial-servo pick for buyers who care more about build quality than software.
Best flagship direct drive wheel (21-25 Nm class)
Moza's new flagship motor architecture in a 21 Nm chassis. The Ultra refinements that turned the R-range from 'good for the price' into a genuine flagship.
$699 / £552
Moza's true-torque flagship. 25 Nm of new-generation direct drive at the price most rivals charge for 16-18, with the only Xbox story in the Moza catalogue.
$980 / £774
The 25 Nm reference flagship that everyone still measures against. Six years on the market and it has not been beaten on build quality or True Drive software polish.
$1589 / £1255
The proper successor to the SC2 Pro that defined what flagship sim racing should feel like. Newer motor, refined thermals, the same True Drive software at the centre of the experience.
$1700 / £1343 The flagship tier is where the buying decision splits along brand-philosophy lines. The R21 Ultra and R25 Ultra are the value-flagship picks and they undercut Simucube by hundreds of pounds while matching the torque tier. The SC2 Pro and SC3 Pro are the software-and-longevity picks that have stayed at the top of the genre for six years and earn their price premium on True Drive depth and the long-term ownership signal nothing else has matched.
Best direct drive wheel for iRacing
iRacing rewards fidelity at the wheel rim above everything else. The default answer for serious iRacing drivers in 2026 is a flagship-tier Simucube — SC2 Pro or SC3 Pro — because True Drive's parameter depth lets you tune the iRacing 360 Hz signal more cleanly than Pit House or Fanalab. The honest budget alternative is the Moza R21 Ultra, which closes most of the gap on signal smoothness at meaningfully less money.
Best direct drive wheel for endurance racing
Long iRacing endurance stints and Le Mans Ultimate's 24-hour formats are where thermal management starts to matter. The Moza R25 Ultra and the Simagic Alpha EVO 12 both have active cooling and run cooler under sustained load than the consumer bases at the same torque tier. For absolute reliability across a five-year ownership horizon, the Simucube 2 Pro remains the long-term gold standard.
Every wheelbase we cover, by tier
Live USD pricing from the simracing-affiliate snapshot and approximate GBP equivalents. Click any base for the full review.
How we test and pick
We do not pretend to have owned and lived with every wheelbase in this guide. Most reviews in this category that claim to are lying. What we do is read the long-form review corpus, watch the long-term ownership videos, talk to people running these bases in serious sim racing communities, and combine that with first-hand experience on the bases we actually own. Direct drive wheelbases are too expensive and the consensus across reviewers too consistent for any one reviewer to add value by pretending otherwise.
The 7-axis rubric on every base page (fidelity, build quality, software, ecosystem, value, reliability, compatibility) is scored from the long-form review corpus rather than from a single one-hour first-impression. Live prices in this guide come from the simracing-affiliate snapshot and refresh every 14 days; GBP figures are an approximate conversion at the time of the last snapshot capture.
The verdict on every pick above is the same verdict that lives on the individual base page. If you disagree with any pick or you think we are missing context that would change the recommendation, the contact links in the footer go straight to me.