Officially licensed and instantly recognisable, the MOZA Racing Lamborghini Revuelto wheel brings genuine road car character to sim racing.
MOZA has been releasing products at a pretty aggressive pace lately, and the Lamborghini Revuelto wheel is one of its more interesting launches. Rather than chasing the usual GT or formula-style sim racing formula, this wheel is aimed at delivering a road car experience, with official Lamborghini licensing, full-size 340mm proportions, and a layout to mirror the real thing.
That immediately makes it a different proposition from the more expensive high-profile replica wheels already on the market. On paper, the Revuelto looks far more attainable than something like a Bentley or BMW M4 GT3 wheel from Fanatec, but those products are genuine motorsport hardware. This wheel is not trying to do that, and it should not be judged on that basis.
The bigger question is whether the Revuelto wheel does enough to justify its premium licensed positioning. Because while MOZA has done a lot right here in terms of ergonomics, rigidity and general driving feel, there are also a few areas where the marketing promise runs ahead of the actual product.
MOZA Racing Lamborghini Revuelto Ratings
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VALUE: 6/10
Licensed replica appeal, but the pricing feels a little ambitious
MOZA’s launch pricing puts the Revuelto wheel at USD 399, EUR 429, GBP 379, and AUD 729. On first glance, that looks relatively affordable for an officially licensed 1:1 replica wheel, especially when you compare it to some of the much more expensive replica or race-derived options on the market. But that comparison only goes so far.
The issue is not that this is a bad product. It is not. The issue is that it does not quite deliver the material quality, tactile feel, or overall authenticity that the branding and marketing language suggest.
That is really where the value score lands. If you specifically want a Revuelto-inspired wheel for casual road driving in the sim, there is definitely something appealing here. But as a purely rational buy, without the Lamborghini angle doing some of the heavy lifting, it is harder to argue that this offers standout value. The feeling throughout testing was that at roughly USD 100 to 150 less, this would be much easier to recommend without hesitation.
Features: 4/10
Looks dramatic, but the functionality is fairly basic
The big selling point here is obvious. This is an officially licensed Lamborghini Revuelto replica wheel. From a visual point of view, MOZA has done a solid job. It looks distinctive, it looks premium at a glance, and it immediately stands out from the endless stream of GT and formula-style sim wheels on the market.
Once you move past the styling, though, the actual feature set is fairly straightforward. On the output side, all you really get is white button backlighting. There is no RGB functionality, no SimHub support, and no telemetry-based lighting effects. That is not necessarily a flaw for a road car style wheel like this, but it does mean the functionality is much simpler than we are used to in many Sim Racing wheels at this price point.
On the front of the wheel, there are 16 backlit buttons, push-button rotary controls, and a layout that looks busy without actually being especially complicated. The more interesting part is on the rear, where MOZA has made one of the smartest decisions in the whole design. Rather than copying the real car’s single full-length paddle arrangement exactly, the sim version adds two analog paddles that can be configured as a dual-axis bite point clutch, separate axes for things like clutch and handbrake, or simple digital buttons depending on the title you are playing. That makes the wheel a lot more useful in sim racing without really sacrificing the visual effect from the front.
There are also five small rear buttons on each side, which are a nice touch and help reinforce the road car theme. In hardware terms they are integrated well, and for buyers who want something that feels a little closer to a modern supercar cabin, they do add to the experience. The catch is that the broader software and control flexibility do not really go as far as they could, which limits how much practical value those extra controls add.
Compatibility is another thing worth mentioning. If you want to run the wheel outside the MOZA ecosystem, you can, but you will need the MOZA adapter, which adds bulk and cost and makes the overall package slightly less straightforward.
So while the Revuelto absolutely delivers on visual presence, the overall package is not especially deep. It looks more feature rich than it really is.
Build Quality: 5/10
Solid where it counts, but less convincing in the details
Structurally, the Revuelto wheel is actually very solid. The aluminum internal skeleton keeps flex to a minimum, the quick release feels secure, and the paddle assembly is one of the better-built parts of the whole package, with carbon fibre, aluminum, Hall sensors and magnets all helping it feel properly robust and snappy in use.
Where it falls away is in the front switchgear, which does not feel premium enough for the price, and the centerpiece lacks the richness you would expect from a licensed Lamborghini product. So while the wheel is rigid and well assembled in functional terms, the tactile quality and overall material presentation stop it from feeling as special as it looks.
SOFTWARE: 6/10
Clean and easy to use, but missing some flexibility
MOZA Pit House is clean, easy to navigate, and covers the basics well. Paddle modes are handled properly, and there are a few useful options for things like lighting brightness and sleep behaviour, so there is nothing fundamentally wrong with the software experience here.
The limitation is that it does not go quite as far as it should for a wheel like this. The biggest missed opportunity for me is the lack of native keyboard shortcut or macro support, which would make a lot of sense on a road car style wheel with extra rear buttons, especially if you want to replicate the real car experience of controlling music while cruising around. As it stands, the software is perfectly usable, but it leaves some of the wheel’s broader potential untapped..
Overall Rating: 5/10
A visually and ergonomically accurate replica for a very small niche
Conclusion
The MOZA Racing Lamborghini Revuelto wheel is at its best when you judge it for its limited intended purpose. The ergonomics are excellent, the paddle setup is genuinely well executed, and the overall rigidity is better than the plastic-heavy presentation might initially suggest. In actual use, it delivers a comfortable and enjoyable driving experience that suits casual driving and cruising far better than a typical GT or formula-style wheel, if that is what you are looking for.
The challenge is that this is an extremely niche product. Unlike a GT3 wheel or a more general-purpose round rim, there are not many situations in sim racing where you specifically need, or even really benefit from, a Lamborghini Revuelto replica steering wheel. Revueltos are not exactly appearing across every sim title, and that makes the appeal here much narrower than the visual impact might suggest. For most people, this is not going to be a wheel they buy because it makes the most sense. It is a wheel they buy because they like the idea of it.
That is where the finer details start to matter more. The front switchgear does not feel premium enough, the centrepiece lacks the richness you would want from a licensed Lamborghini product, and the software misses an obvious opportunity to make the rear buttons more useful for exactly the kind of relaxed driving experience this wheel is built around. None of those things ruin it, but they do make the price harder to justify when this is already such a specialised product.
So while MOZA has done a lot right objectively, the Revuelto ends up feeling like a wheel with limited appeal beyond Lamborghini fans. If that is exactly what you are after, there is definitely something to like here. But if you are looking for the most versatile or best-value option for sim racing more broadly, this is not it.
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Pros
- Excellent ergonomics
- Strong paddle design and implementation
- Very solid rigidity in use
- Visually striking and recognisable
- Accurate road car style driving feel
- Official Lamborghini licensing
Cons
- Very niche appeal
- Buttons feel cheap for the price
- Encoders are fairly basic
- Centerpiece lacks a premium feel
- Software misses useful shortcut and macro support
- Hard to justify on value for most sim racers
Have our MOZA reviews helped you decide what the best sim racing gear is for you?
Please consider using the links on this page to make your purchase.
By doing so you’ll be supporting Boosted Media at no additional cost to you! This option is available for a huge range of Sim Racing gear.
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