Gran Turismo 7 has a 25th Anniversary Edition with a sleek SteelBook case and PS4/PS5 copies

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$90 edition includes a PS5 disc and PS4 code

Barring any more delays (and here I am bracing for accusations of totally jinxing it), Gran Turismo 7 will be out on March 4, 2022. It’s arguably too early to start thinking about pre-orders, but for those of you who are open to that possibility, or just love GT enough to be into a collector’s edition, here’s the latest. As announced on the PlayStation Blog, Gran Turismo 7 will have a 25th Anniversary Edition with a rather sleek SteelBook case.

Aside from the cover art (and the included in-game cars, like the Castrol TOM’S Supra), the most interesting thing about the 25th Anniversary Edition is that it comes with two versions of Gran Turismo 7: a physical PS5 disc, and a digital PS4 voucher code.

That might seem like a no-brainer, but it’s a semi-surprising sight in the realm of cross-generation PlayStation releases. It’s been a messy situation all around.

For $90, the physical Gran Turismo 7 25th Anniversary Edition comes with:

  • PS5 game disc
  • PS4 game voucher
  • 1,100,000 CR (credits)
  • Toyota GR Yaris with country-specific Livery
  • 30 Manufacturer / Partner Avatars
  • The Music of Gran Turismo Official Soundtrack
  • Toyota Castrol TOM’S Supra
  • Mazda RX-VISION GT3 Concept (Stealth)
  • Porsche 917K Living Legend

The digital version of the 25th Anniversary Edition is also $90, and it comes with the funnily-named PS4/PS5 “dual entitlement.”

Worth remembering: if you get Gran Turismo 7 on PS4 (which will be $60 at launch) and you want to upgrade to the PS5 edition (which launches at $70), you’ll have to pay $10.

As for other bonuses and cars, especially for folks who just want the dang game, the (pre-order) “Launch Edition” of GT7 comes with 100,000 credits, the Toyota Castrol TOM’S Supra, Mazda RX-VISION GT3 Concept (Stealth), and Porsche 917K Living Legend.

If you’re wondering about the eyebrow-raising “internet required for most functionality” warnings, it’s true — GT7 is set up that way to “prevent cheating overall from people trying to modify the save data,” per Eurogamer‘s interview with Kazunori Yamauchi.