• Latest
  • Trending
Tour de France 2026 Review

Tour de France 2026 Review: Rain Changes Everything, Little Else Does

Olivia Review

Olivia Review: Grief Wanders Through Blood and Wind

The Trial Review

The Trial Review: Listening Becomes Evidence

Devil May Cry 5: Devil Hunter Edition Review

Devil May Cry 5: Devil Hunter Edition Review: Style Survives the Switch

London’s Last Wilderness Review

London’s Last Wilderness Review: Pablo Behrens Turns Neglect Into Sci-Fi

What Comes From Sitting In Silence? Review

What Comes From Sitting In Silence? Review: Judge Khatoon Holds the Room

Heat Review

Heat Review: The Sun Becomes a System

Stormbound Review

Stormbound Review: IMAX Thunder, Overlit Metaphor

Super Woden: Rally Edge Review

Super Woden: Rally Edge Review: Arcade Rally With Real Bite

Stand Up Review

Stand Up Review: Disability Drama Without the Halo

The Voices of Our Mother Review

The Voices of Our Mother Review: Caregiving Becomes the Curse

Blind Love Review

Blind Love Review: Repression Gets a Patient Close-Up

Husbands in Action Review

Husbands in Action Review: Two Dads, One Kidnapping, Pure Panic

  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Gazettely Review Guidelines
Monday, June 22, 2026
GAZETTELY
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Jeremy Clarkson

    Jeremy Clarkson’s Prostate Cancer Is in Remission: “I Am Without a Doubt the World’s Luckiest Man”

    Toxic A Fairytale for Grown-Ups

    Yash’s Toxic Locks August 26 Release, Targeting India’s Biggest Multi-Holiday Weekend

    Tony Leung

    Tony Leung on AI and Cinema: “There’s No Soul. I Don’t Think It’s an Art.”

    Sesame Street

    Netflix Wins Sesame Street Movie Rights, Ending a 14-Year Development Saga

    Sam Levinson

    Sam Levinson Says Euphoria’s OnlyFans Storyline Was Always Meant as a Critique: “It Hollows Out the Individual”

    download 2

    The Man Who Voices Every Minion Reveals Why He Almost Quit — and What Brought Him Back

    Friends

    ‘Friends’ Cast Mourns “Father Figure” James Burrows: “He Spoiled Us Rotten”

    James Burrows

    James Burrows, the Man Who Directed Over 1,000 Sitcom Episodes, Dies at 85

    Sam Altman

    Amazon Drops Nearly Finished Sam Altman Film Months After Signing $50 Billion OpenAI Deal

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Olivia Review

    Olivia Review: Grief Wanders Through Blood and Wind

    The Trial Review

    The Trial Review: Listening Becomes Evidence

    London’s Last Wilderness Review

    London’s Last Wilderness Review: Pablo Behrens Turns Neglect Into Sci-Fi

    What Comes From Sitting In Silence? Review

    What Comes From Sitting In Silence? Review: Judge Khatoon Holds the Room

    Heat Review

    Heat Review: The Sun Becomes a System

    Stormbound Review

    Stormbound Review: IMAX Thunder, Overlit Metaphor

    Stand Up Review

    Stand Up Review: Disability Drama Without the Halo

    The Voices of Our Mother Review

    The Voices of Our Mother Review: Caregiving Becomes the Curse

    Blind Love Review

    Blind Love Review: Repression Gets a Patient Close-Up

  • Game Reviews
    Devil May Cry 5: Devil Hunter Edition Review

    Devil May Cry 5: Devil Hunter Edition Review: Style Survives the Switch

    Super Woden: Rally Edge Review

    Super Woden: Rally Edge Review: Arcade Rally With Real Bite

    Secret Paws - Cozy Apartments Review

    Secret Paws – Cozy Apartments Review: Tiny Cats, Big Perspective Tricks

    33 Immortals Review

    33 Immortals Review: Big Raid Energy, Small Upgrade Sparks

    Dave the Diver: In the Jungle Review

    Dave the Diver: In the Jungle Review: Bancho Takes the Grill Outside

    Mousebusters Review

    Mousebusters Review: Rodent Scale, Human Sadness

    EA Sports UFC 6 Review

    EA Sports UFC 6 Review: The Stand-Up Game Finally Hits Clean

    Tour de France 2026 Review

    Tour de France 2026 Review: Rain Changes Everything, Little Else Does

    Keep The Heroes Out Review

    Keep The Heroes Out Review: Dungeon Defense With Bite

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Jeremy Clarkson

    Jeremy Clarkson’s Prostate Cancer Is in Remission: “I Am Without a Doubt the World’s Luckiest Man”

    Toxic A Fairytale for Grown-Ups

    Yash’s Toxic Locks August 26 Release, Targeting India’s Biggest Multi-Holiday Weekend

    Tony Leung

    Tony Leung on AI and Cinema: “There’s No Soul. I Don’t Think It’s an Art.”

    Sesame Street

    Netflix Wins Sesame Street Movie Rights, Ending a 14-Year Development Saga

    Sam Levinson

    Sam Levinson Says Euphoria’s OnlyFans Storyline Was Always Meant as a Critique: “It Hollows Out the Individual”

    download 2

    The Man Who Voices Every Minion Reveals Why He Almost Quit — and What Brought Him Back

    Friends

    ‘Friends’ Cast Mourns “Father Figure” James Burrows: “He Spoiled Us Rotten”

    James Burrows

    James Burrows, the Man Who Directed Over 1,000 Sitcom Episodes, Dies at 85

    Sam Altman

    Amazon Drops Nearly Finished Sam Altman Film Months After Signing $50 Billion OpenAI Deal

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Olivia Review

    Olivia Review: Grief Wanders Through Blood and Wind

    The Trial Review

    The Trial Review: Listening Becomes Evidence

    London’s Last Wilderness Review

    London’s Last Wilderness Review: Pablo Behrens Turns Neglect Into Sci-Fi

    What Comes From Sitting In Silence? Review

    What Comes From Sitting In Silence? Review: Judge Khatoon Holds the Room

    Heat Review

    Heat Review: The Sun Becomes a System

    Stormbound Review

    Stormbound Review: IMAX Thunder, Overlit Metaphor

    Stand Up Review

    Stand Up Review: Disability Drama Without the Halo

    The Voices of Our Mother Review

    The Voices of Our Mother Review: Caregiving Becomes the Curse

    Blind Love Review

    Blind Love Review: Repression Gets a Patient Close-Up

  • Game Reviews
    Devil May Cry 5: Devil Hunter Edition Review

    Devil May Cry 5: Devil Hunter Edition Review: Style Survives the Switch

    Super Woden: Rally Edge Review

    Super Woden: Rally Edge Review: Arcade Rally With Real Bite

    Secret Paws - Cozy Apartments Review

    Secret Paws – Cozy Apartments Review: Tiny Cats, Big Perspective Tricks

    33 Immortals Review

    33 Immortals Review: Big Raid Energy, Small Upgrade Sparks

    Dave the Diver: In the Jungle Review

    Dave the Diver: In the Jungle Review: Bancho Takes the Grill Outside

    Mousebusters Review

    Mousebusters Review: Rodent Scale, Human Sadness

    EA Sports UFC 6 Review

    EA Sports UFC 6 Review: The Stand-Up Game Finally Hits Clean

    Tour de France 2026 Review

    Tour de France 2026 Review: Rain Changes Everything, Little Else Does

    Keep The Heroes Out Review

    Keep The Heroes Out Review: Dungeon Defense With Bite

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
GAZETTELY
No Result
View All Result
Tour de France 2026 Review

Your Fault: London Review: Oxford, Jealousy, and Another Messy Love Story

Robert Downey Jr. Says Avengers: Doomsday Has Found the Answer to Marvel's Toughest Post-Endgame Question

Home Games PC Games

Tour de France 2026 Review: Rain Changes Everything, Little Else Does

Mahan Zahiri by Mahan Zahiri
4 days ago
in Games, PC Games, PlayStation, Reviews Games, Xbox
Reading Time: 7 mins read
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on PinterestShare on WhatsAppShare on TelegramSummarize with ChatGPTSummarize with Perplexity

Tour de France 2026 arrives from Cyanide Studio and NACON on the same calendar rhythm the series has followed for years, landing in stores just ahead of the actual race it simulates. This is the second outing built on Unreal Engine 5, the engine switch having done its heavy lifting last year, which leaves this edition to answer a quieter question: what do you do with a new engine once the novelty of having one has worn off? The answer, this time, is weather.

Rain, wind, and shifting temperatures move from background texture to a functioning system, reshaping how a descent or a cobbled sector plays out mid-stage. The licensed Tour route returns in full, opening in Barcelona and closing through Montmartre, joined by smaller official races and a scattering of fictional ones that round out a season. None of this is a reinvention. It’s a cycling simulator that has spent years building its own grammar of effort and positioning, and 2026 spends its energy refining that grammar rather than replacing it.

Three Bars, One Decision Every Second

Cycling games live or die on how they translate an endurance sport into something you can actually feel through a controller, and Tour de France 2026 keeps the system the franchise has used for several years running: three gauges, yellow for current output, blue for total stamina, red for a reserve you spend only when a race demands it. Burn through the red bar chasing a breakaway on a flat stage and you’ll watch the peloton swallow you back up a kilometer later. Hold it in reserve through a mountain stage like Alpe d’Huez and you’ll have something left for the final kilometer when riders rated higher than you start cracking.

The actual pedaling is handled through triggers rather than a stick, holding one to ride and the other to brake, with the X button doing double duty as a standing sprint and a desperate, last-ditch acceleration. It’s a scheme that draws from stamina-management games as much as traditional racers, and longtime players of the series will recognize it instantly. New riders will need a stage or two to understand that pedaling downhill at the wrong moment puts you on the ground rather than ahead of the field.

The time trial position is the franchise’s most distinctive wrinkle, and it returns unchanged in concept if sharper in feel. Tucking into the TT crouch buys speed and costs you the ability to corner cleanly, so a rider taking a technical individual time trial has to learn exactly which bends demand sitting up and which can be carried through in the tuck. Get it wrong on a wet hairpin and the cost is steep, which connects directly to this year’s headline system.

Drafting and attacking work the way they have for several editions: hold a button to tuck into another rider’s slipstream, hammer X to launch an attack and watch your radar blip pull away from a group that can’t immediately answer. Veterans of Tour de France 2025 will find breakaways exactly as stubborn to execute here as they were last year, one of the few mechanical threads the studio left completely alone.

Also Read

  • best 2025 games
    Gazettely's 30 Best Video Games of 2025
  • Best Christmas Movies
    30 Best Christmas Movies to Watch This Holiday Season
  • Super Mario Party Jamboree Nintendo Switch 2 Edition + Jamboree TV Review
    Super Mario Party Jamboree Nintendo Switch 2 Edition…
  • Street Fighter 6 Years 1-2 Fighters Edition Review (1)
    Street Fighter 6: Years 1-2 Fighters Edition Review…
  • Best 2025 Movies
    Gazettely's 30 Best Movies of 2025
  • best 2025 tv shows
    Gazettely's 30 Best TV Shows of 2025

What is genuinely new sits in two places. The Team Time Trial event finally gives players a relay order to set and a leader to protect, turning what used to be four or five riders mashing the same input into an actual coordination puzzle. And a new agility attribute quietly reshapes every rider’s profile, mattering in a way it never did in earlier entries, because for the first time it interacts with conditions outside anyone’s control.

When the Sky Decides the Stage

Weather is the system Cyanide built this entire release around, and it earns the attention. A stage that starts under clear skies can turn to rain by the second hour with no warning, and the road itself changes underneath you. Wet asphalt brings locked wheels and slides into corners that were routine an hour earlier, and braking late on a rain-soaked switchback can send a rider into a guardrail rather than around it. One descent produces exactly the kind of moment the system was designed for: a sudden downpour mid-stage causes a multi-rider crash that shreds the front of the peloton, and a rider willing to take the risk and brake later than the pack can open a gap that simply would not exist in dry conditions.

Tour de France 2026 Review

This changes how a descent functions across the whole game. In earlier editions, going downhill was a chance to recover stamina while the bike did the work. Here it’s a calculated risk every time, and the new agility stat becomes the difference between a rider who threads a wet corner and one who slides across it. Crosswinds, a feature the series has carried for a few years now, stack with the new wet-road mechanics to create stages where two separate environmental threats work against you at once, something no prior Tour de France game has asked players to track simultaneously.

The presentation keeps pace. Rain affects what riders are wearing, switching kits between short sleeves and full wet gear depending on conditions, and the puddle reflections and cloud formations look sharper than anything the series has rendered before. Layered against the existing soundscape of wheels, breathing, and crowd noise, a rainstorm changes the texture of a stage as much as it changes the racing.

Here’s the catch, and it’s one worth sitting with: weather is the only major system this release adds. Breakaway difficulty, AI behavior, team radio, all of it carries over from 2025 untouched. For a series with this much history behind it, asking one weather system to carry the entire argument for buying a new copy is a tall order, even when that system performs as well as this one does.

Pro Leader, Pro Team, and the Rest of the Field

Pro Leader puts you through the character creator first: name, nation, jersey, equipment, then the rider-specific sliders for age, height, weight, cadence, and specialization, climber or sprinter or one of several flatter profiles. Ten avatars cover hairstyles and beard options, though you can’t push past that into deeper customization. What happens after creation is the part returning players will recognize with a wince. Your created rider starts with terrible stats and a team that can’t qualify for most of the calendar, which means the opening season offers maybe three or four races you can actually play before the rest gets simulated past you. This has been true of Pro Leader for several years running, and 2026 does nothing to soften it.

The practical answer, and the one the game itself seems to expect, is to start on Amateur or Professional, clear the early progression challenges, and only step up to Champion or Legend once your rider’s overall rating has climbed. Those challenges, things like joining a set number of breakaways or chasing a mountain classification, raise your stats when completed, but the game still won’t show you which ones are active or how close you are to finishing them, a complaint that has followed the series since at least the last two installments.

Pro Team sidesteps the worst of this. Managing a full roster, building a calendar, handling transfers, gives you a much faster route to competing for results across every race type rather than waiting on one underpowered rider to catch up. The tradeoff that has dogged the franchise remains in place here too: riders neither age nor retire across multiple seasons, so a five-year save looks almost identical to a one-year save, same names, same faces, every January. A series this committed to simulating effort and weather hasn’t found a way to simulate a roster aging out, and that gap stands out more with every passing year it goes unaddressed.

Club Tour rounds out the package with two scoring modes, Race for ranked finishes across rotating challenges and Descent for timed runs down a mountain, both tracked across current, monthly, and annual leaderboards. Criterium pushes further into actual head-to-head play, up to six players each fielding multiple specialized squads, mountain, flat, hills, though the random assignment to terrain means your climbing team can just as easily get handed a sprint finish. Four difficulty settings, Amateur through Legend, frame all of it, and Legend remains exactly as punishing as its name suggests.

The Engine Upgrade Nobody Asked to Repeat

The route work is where this game still earns its license fee. The Grand Départ rolls out of Barcelona under the Sagrada Família, the Tour climbs Alpe d’Huez twice across the season, and the Paris finale threads through Montmartre and past the Sacré-Cœur for a finish that feels like an event rather than a formality. This year adds the Muscat Classic, all desert roads and palm trees and double-digit gradients, and the muddy unpaved sectors of Paris-Tours, both genuinely new additions to a calendar that otherwise leans on the same fictional fillers, the Euro Tour and Circuit Grand Est among them, that have padded the season for a few editions running now.

Tour de France 2026 Review

Visually the upgrade from last year’s engine switch is holding up, with stronger water reflections, denser crowds along the barriers, and weather effects that look better than anything the series has shown before. The cracks are still there if you’re looking. Anti-aliasing shimmers on distant scenery, pop-in appears on longer straights, and spectators occasionally clip into the road as a rider passes through them, the kind of rough edge that’s been a known issue across at least the last couple of releases. Rider models and animations remain stiffer than the environments around them, a gap the engine switch hasn’t closed.

The commentary track adds new lines this year, which helps, but it’s still prone to discussing leaders the player can’t see while a rider stuck mid-pack gets almost nothing relevant said about them, a complaint that has trailed the series’ broadcast presentation for a while. Accessibility options are genuinely expanded, colorblind filters, adjustable subtitle size and position, customizable controller icon colors, and the redesigned HUD this year does real work, making the three effort gauges easier to read at a glance during a chaotic sprint finish than in any previous entry. Stability has improved too. Fewer bugs and fewer erratic AI moments turned up across longer sessions than in last year’s game, even if AI decision-making in tight finishes can still go sideways.

Set this release next to Tour de France 2025 and the shape of the comparison is clear. Last year’s job was the engine. This year’s job was supposed to be content, and what arrived instead was one weather system doing the work that several new modes or routes might have done. The rain makes this a sharper-handling game than its predecessor. Nothing else about it grew much larger.

Tour de France 2026 is a professional cycling simulation and sports strategy game developed by Cyanide Studios and published by Nacon. Released on June 4, 2026, the game is available on PC via Steam and features full controller support. In this installment, players take on the role of elite international cyclists competing to win the prestigious Yellow Jersey, offering an official route recreation of the 2026 Tour de France from the Grand Départ in Barcelona to the final stretch in Paris. The game introduces brand new mechanics including a revamped team time trial system, complex dynamic weather systems that directly alter bike handling, and expanded tactical management features spanning 100 unique playable stages.

The Review

Tour de France 2026

6 Score

Tour de France 2026 plays like a franchise that found one good idea and decided that was enough for the year. The weather system genuinely changes how a descent or a wet corner has to be ridden, and the effort gauges remain the smartest translation of cycling tactics in any game carrying this license. But measured against 2025, the career structure, the breakaway difficulty, and the lack of rider aging are identical, and one new mechanic can only stretch so far across a sequel. Reliable rather than ambitious.

PROS

  • Weather genuinely reshapes descents and cornering
  • Effort-gauge system remains the genre's sharpest translation of tactics
  • New Team Time Trial relay adds real coordination
  • Muscat Classic and Paris-Tours bring fresh terrain
  • Redesigned HUD and steadier performance

CONS

  • Pro Leader's brutal opening season, unsoftened again
  • Riders still don't age or retire across saves
  • Breakaway difficulty and AI carried over untouched
  • Commentary still loses track of mid-pack riders
  • Pop-in, clipping crowds, stiff rider models persist

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0

Tags: Cyanide StudiosFeaturedNaconRacingSimulationSportsStrategyTour de France 2026
Previous Post

Your Fault: London Review: Oxford, Jealousy, and Another Messy Love Story

Next Post

Robert Downey Jr. Says Avengers: Doomsday Has Found the Answer to Marvel’s Toughest Post-Endgame Question

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Connect with
Login
I allow to create an account
When you login first time using a Social Login button, we collect your account public profile information shared by Social Login provider, based on your privacy settings. We also get your email address to automatically create an account for you in our website. Once your account is created, you'll be logged-in to this account.
DisagreeAgree
Notify of
guest
Connect with
I allow to create an account
When you login first time using a Social Login button, we collect your account public profile information shared by Social Login provider, based on your privacy settings. We also get your email address to automatically create an account for you in our website. Once your account is created, you'll be logged-in to this account.
DisagreeAgree
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted

Try AI Movie Recommender

Gazettely AI Movie Recommender

This Week's Top Reads

  • Is This Seat Taken? Review

    Is This Seat Taken? Review: A Satisfying Mental Workout

    1106 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Trust Review: Squandered Potential and an Incoherent Plot

    6 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • House of the Dragon Season 3 Review: The Throne Learns to Bleed

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Polygamist Review: Betrayal Burns Bright in Netflix’s 22-Episode Drama

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • I Will Find You Review: Parental Love Turns Dangerous in Netflix’s Latest Mystery

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Season Review: Hong Kong Glows While the Dialogue Sputters

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Time of Death Review: Michael Kelly Anchors a Grim Prison Mystery

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Must Read Articles

Sugar Season 2 Review
TV Shows

Sugar Season 2 Review: A Noir With a Telescope It Barely Uses

2 days ago
Voicemails for Isabelle Review
Movies

Voicemails for Isabelle Review: No Tom Hanks, and It Knows

2 days ago
EA Sports UFC 6 Review
Reviews Games

EA Sports UFC 6 Review: The Stand-Up Game Finally Hits Clean

4 days ago
I Will Find You Review
TV Shows

I Will Find You Review: Parental Love Turns Dangerous in Netflix’s Latest Mystery

4 days ago
Girls Like Girls Review
Movies

Girls Like Girls Review: Hayley Kiyoko Finds Her Voice Behind the Camera

4 days ago
Loading poll ...
Coming Soon
Which of Alfred Hitchcock's 1960s thrillers is your all-time favorite?

Gazettely is your go-to destination for all things gaming, movies, and TV. With fresh reviews, trending articles, and editor picks, we help you stay informed and entertained.

© 2021-2026 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

What’s Inside

  • Movie & TV Reviews
  • Game Reviews
  • Featured Articles
  • Latest News
  • Editorial Picks

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About US
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Review Guidelines

Follow Us

Facebook X-twitter Youtube Instagram
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movies
  • Entertainment News
  • Movie and TV Reviews
  • TV Shows
  • Game News
  • Game Reviews
  • Contact Us

© 2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

wpDiscuz
0
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x
| Reply