What it is
The Fanatec Gran Turismo DD Pro is the wheelbase that brought direct drive to PlayStation 5, and four years on it is still the only option in its price band that is officially licensed by Sony for PS5 and Gran Turismo 7. Eight Newton-metres of peak torque, the Boost Kit 180 power supply included in the box (no upsell, no separate purchase), the QR2 quick release as standard, and full PC compatibility. Xbox compatibility is available via any Xbox-licensed Fanatec rim plugged into the base.
The chassis underneath is the same one that lives inside the CSL DD. Same motor, same housing, same internals. What you are paying the extra money for is the PlayStation license and the bundle: the GT DD Pro typically ships as a complete kit with a moulded plastic rim and the entry CSL Pedals, so a PS5 driver can buy one box and start racing the same evening. If you already own a CSL DD and you want PlayStation, you cannot just buy a license — you need a different base.
Who it’s for
You’re the right buyer if you race on PS5. There is no realistic alternative in this price tier. The Logitech G Pro and the newer G RS50 are the only real competitors and they trade differently on bundle, rim quality and ecosystem. The Thrustmaster T598 is the closest direct rival on paper but Fanatec still wins on the depth of the rim and pedal catalogue you can grow into. None of those alternatives come close to Fanatec’s installed base on the PlayStation side.
You’re also the right buyer if you live in a multi-platform house. The GT DD Pro is the cleanest single base for someone who wants PS5 today and PC tomorrow, with a Xbox-licensed rim available as a third option. No other direct-drive base ticks all three boxes.
You’re the wrong buyer if you’re a PC-only driver. The CSL DD 8Nm is the same chassis with no PS licensing, sold for less. Buy that, or step up to a Moza R12 V2 for more torque at a similar all-in price. You’re also the wrong buyer if you genuinely need more than 8Nm of headroom — the GT DD Pro’s ceiling is real, and a heavy LMP at full force feedback will find it.
In use
Plug it in, install Fanatec Control Panel on PC or just connect it to the PS5 directly, and it works. The first impression is the same as the CSL DD because under the skin it is the CSL DD: detail through the wheel, kerbs you can feel rib by rib, the moment a front tyre starts to slip showing up as load instead of as a rumble. For a Gran Turismo 7 driver moving up from a DualSense controller or a belt-drive Logitech, this is the single biggest perceptual upgrade in the hobby.
The 8Nm peak is plenty for road-car GT racing on a desk and is the right ceiling for the price. Push it hard in a heavy formula or LMP car at full force feedback and the motor runs out of headroom in the heaviest peaks, the same way the CSL DD does. That ceiling is exactly why Fanatec sells the ClubSport DD 12 a tier above and it is exactly why you do not buy the GT DD Pro if you want serious endurance LMP authority.
The bundled rim is the part to plan around. It’s a plastic moulding that does the job and lasts, and it is also obviously the cheapest part of the kit. Most long-term GT DD Pro owners end up replacing it within twelve months with a CSL Elite, a Podium GT V2, or one of Fanatec’s licensed-livery rims. Budget for it.
What to watch out for
Three things, all well documented in the long-term reviews above. First, the bundled rim. It is fine. It is not the rim you want to use forever. Plan the upgrade.
Second, Fanatec’s quality control. The hardware ships from the same lines as the CSL DD and it inherits the same intermittent QC pattern: most bases ship perfect, some need RMA for play in the QR, rattle or motor symptoms. The new Corsair-era 3-year warranty (introduced June 2025) gives you longer cover than the old 24-month policy, but the RMA queue itself is a separate problem the warranty can’t fix.
Third, the bundled CSL Pedals. They are a two-pedal kit with no load cell. They are the first thing serious drivers replace, and replacing them is a meaningful per-lap upgrade. Budget for either CSL Pedals LC, V3 pedals, or a third-party load-cell set.
Verdict
If you race on PlayStation 5, buy it. There is no real alternative in 2026.
If you race on PC and want a Fanatec, buy the CSL DD 8 instead and save the difference for pedals. If you race on Xbox only, the CSL DD also makes more sense unless you specifically want the GT DD Pro bundle.
Either way, plan the rim upgrade and the pedal upgrade into the budget. The base is great. The bundle is a starting point, not a destination.