Subscribe to some Workshop Maps in Steam.BakkesMod is installed to permit hosting and joining local workshop maps. Hamachi is installed to create a Virtual Private Network (VPN) on your computer that your friends can then use (Hamachi) to connect to for “Local” games”. Additional textures files are copied into your Steam/RL folder so the maps look like their makers intended. Workshop maps are subscribed in Steam and then auto-download into Rocket League ( although you may need to re-launch RL to get them). I have verified these sources as genuine and installed them myself (on several PCs/Users) so I believe they are safe. The following procedure requires you to download some files from the web. Note that Rocket Launcher (the windows app) has stopped working – but the Rocket plugin for BakkesMod still works well.
But smarter people than me have figured out how to get it to work – so I thought I would document it here as clearly and simply as I can to try and get more people to play with!įirst of all = credit to Lethamyr who recorded the first video I found on this topic – you’ll find that here. While you can play these maps on your own in Rocket League – Pysonix don’t support multiplayer games with custom maps (yet!). Rocket League on a Pool Table, Water Polo, Table Tennis, the game Portal, Quiddich, and more.
So it turn out that Rocket League has custom map making features which have been used to great advantage – with some pretty amazing maps. Apart from the game trailer, the Honest Trailer is pretty funny to watch as well. It’s a natural next step for a 777 pilot like me. So Rocket League is a phenomenally successful physics based game that is basically Car Soccer in a variety of Cars that Accelerate, Boost, Handbrake Turn, Jump, have Rocket Boost and have three dimensional Roll, Pitch and Yaw while airborne (including barrel roll).