Review: Gran Turismo 7
The video game serves as a fun reminder that free trade, not protectionism, makes us all better off.

One of the Trump administration's many bad ideas that has persisted into the Biden years is its support for trade protectionism. Americans should supposedly spend their American dollars on American car brands to support American jobs. The release of Gran Turismo 7 in March served as a reminder of how much that philosophy hurts American consumers.
At launch, the racing game (from a Japanese developer) contains 424 vehicles made by 62 manufacturers from eight countries, as well as 34 track circuits from 13 countries and five continents; even more may be added in later game updates. Racers from all over the world can compete online. The grand tour of tracks, cars, and players from across the globe is the game's greatest strength.
If American players had access only to the fraction of American players, 62 American cars, and nine American tracks in the game, they'd be in for a much less fun (and much slower) experience. It's not protectionism that makes us all better off—it's competition.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
I'm earning 85 dollars/h to complete some work on a home computer. I not at all believed that it can be possible but my close friend earning $25k only within four weeks simply doing this top task as well as she has satisfied me to join.
Check further details by reaching this link..>> https://oldprofits.blogspot.com/
Meh. With all of the spam bots posting about million dollar jobs just for sitting on their asses, free trade is so early 2000s.
So, not a review. Just a pathetic false equivalence.
Home income solution to enable everyone to work online and receive weekly payments to bank acct. Earn over $500 every day and get payouts every week straight to account bank. My last month of income was $30,390 and all I do is work up to 4 hours a day on my computer. (res-11) Easy work and steady income are great with this job.
.
More information. >> https://dollarscash12.blogspot.com/
Incredibly so.
Does he know how "free trade" Japan is? Not very.
It's also one of the more ludicrous grind fests in history and a less enjoyable racing game than Microsoft's Forza series.
Of all the dumb articles I've read, this is the latest.
Is anyone calling for tariffs on foreign-made video games?
Don't think that was really the argument being made...but regardless, this is a pretty stupid and pointless "article." and how on earth can you call this a "review" with a straight face. "GT 7 has lots of cars and tracks" is about the only info I get from this review.
Yeah, this is Fiona level of stretching, except worse.
They should team up. Lots of cars in a video game mean we should import everyone from EasternEurope/MiddleEast/LatinAmerica/Antartica...
You're right on the money UA. The days of my not taking Reason seriously have definitely come to a middle.
A short, meaningless paragraph in the middle of a lame 3 paragraph piece is not a "review". It BARELY qualifies as a "blurb".
"One of the Trump administration's many bad ideas that has persisted into the Biden years is its support for trade protectionism."
Trump did offer ZERO tariffs if others would follow suit.
Car design and manufacturing is a hotbed of crony capitalism, government management of the economy, massive subsidies, and barriers to entry.
The idea that the boring, overpriced, crappy, cookie-cutter cars most people can afford are a reflection of global "free trade" is utterly ludicrous. Reason cheering fantasy cars in a video game is like Pravda extolling the virtues of the Soviet consumer products industry.
Neither the car market nor the import of cheap crap from China are instances of "free trade". Free trade between two nations requires that both nations have free markets and that individuals in both countries can freely participate in the other market and move currency freely between the two markets.