Motorsport Games: BTCC Game Canceled - IndyCar Game Staff Laid Off?

BTCC Game Canceled rFactor 2 touring cars.png
The official BTCC game is canceled: TOCA, the rights holder to the popular British touring car series, has terminated the licensing agreement with Motorsport Games.

Image credit: Studio 397

Last updated: November 7th, 2023, 5.20pm CET


Even though sim racers had been looking forward to an official BTCC game, there had been serious doubts about it seeing the light of day. Initially announced for 2022, the game was most recently delayed to 2024. Now, it is officially canceled altogether, according to a TOCA statement.

The organizer of the BTCC chose to terminate the licensing agreement with Motorsport Games. This comes just a few days after news broke that MSG would reduce its workforce by 40%.

It is with regret that TOCA now advise that it has been forced to terminate that agreement forthwith, due to ongoing fundamental breaches of the agreement by Motorsport Games. Having been given sufficient latitude to rectify those contractual breaches, unfortunately Motorsport Games has failed to do so.
TOCA statement on canceling the BTCC licensing agreement with Motorsport Games

BTCC Game Canceled: “We share the frustration”​

Furthermore, TOCA argues that it made this decision “to protect the reputation and intellectual property of the BTCC, including those of its participants and partners.” The organization admits that “this news will come as a huge disappointment to our hundreds of thousands of fans, many of whom were eagerly anticipating the release of a new BTCC game… and we very much share that frustration, due to Motorsport Games being unable to fulfil its contractual commitments.

However, there is official BTCC content under the MSG roof. rFactor 2 has seen the introduction of cars and tracks step-by-step since the start of the agreement with TOCA in 2020. The sim now features the full grids of the 2021 to 2023 seasons. Additionally, most of the circuits on the calendar are there as well.


What’s next for IndyCar and Le Mans Ultimate?​

The BTCC license is not the first that is not under Motorsport Games’ roof anymore. Recently, the company sold its NASCAR license to iRacing. The company is going to produce a standalone game of the popular stock car series. IndyCar still has an agreement with MSG, although the open-wheel series game’s future is uncertain, too. Whether the series is next to pull the plug remains to be seen now that the BTCC game is canceled.

However, Mike Straw of Insider Gaming claims he has been told that the IndyCar game's staff has been laid off by MSG. This would likely mean that the title is not going to see the light of day either. Straw had reported that Motorsport Games could lose the NASCAR license as early as August - iRacing bought the license not even two months later.


The IndyCar game was scheduled for launch in 2024, and recently, a trailer had emerged. It would appear that the game was quite far along in development. Could another entity purchase all assets?

IndyCar themselves have not announced how they are going to handle the situation. Penske Entertainment (the owners of the series) CEO Mark Miles told racer.com that "we are in regular communication with Motorsport Games to get the information that we need to decide what’s best for us going forward." No decision has been reached yet, according to Miles.


As things stand, it appears that all of Motorsport Games’ eggs are in the baskets of rFactor 2 and the upcoming Le Mans Ultimate. rF2‘s player numbers have recently increased after the additon of a new competitive online system. WEC fans eagerly await LMU by the end of 2023.

What are your thoughts on the BTCC game being canceled? Let us know on Twitter @OverTake_gg or in the comments below!
About author
Yannik Haustein
Lifelong motorsport enthusiast and sim racing aficionado, walking racing history encyclopedia.

Sim racing editor, streamer and one half of the SimRacing Buddies podcast (warning, German!).

Heel & Toe Gang 4 life :D

Comments

Thanks to AndreasFSC's mod I can enjoy the super tourers seasons from the 90s but it would be nice to get some current stuff as well.
A rF2 one would be great. :thumbsup:
There are a couple of 90s BTCC cars including super tourers in the steam workshop for rF2 that are pretty good.

Anyway, as allready expected they are dropping the lisences for games that have a niche audience. I suspect that the Indycar game might be on the table aswell as I don't see that one working out from a commercial POV. Now the other studios can show how much they care for it. Win win for all of us. :p
 
At this point I would settle for a btcc arcade game....
People still don't understand that the attempt to build a BTCC game and achieve a financial success with it is allmost impossible. Who is gonna buy and play it? rF2 features most of the content in pretty good shape for the sim racing growd and it still didn't boost the numbers to acceptable levels that would varant a further investment. Same goes for Indycar. That series is so niche, even in the US compared to other US sports that it makes no sense to produce a game for it. And I personaly wouldn't care for a game if it follows the F1 EA/Codies strategy. But mileage may vary.
 
The fastest route to a new BTCC game looks like Reiza or Iracing.Both have most of the tracks.(Iracing missing just Thruxton?) but neither has the cars.
Won't happen. Alan Gow has always made it clear that if there's going to be an official game then it has to have the championship season, cars and tracks all as their own game
 
Won't happen. Alan Gow has always made it clear that if there's going to be an official game then it has to have the championship season, cars and tracks all as their own game

Yeah it needs to be a standalone as BTCC is starting to have some quirky rules of their own, that rF2 doesn't have.
 
There are a couple of 90s BTCC cars including super tourers in the steam workshop for rF2 that are pretty good.

Anyway, as allready expected they are dropping the lisences for games that have a niche audience. I suspect that the Indycar game might be on the table aswell as I don't see that one working out from a commercial POV. Now the other studios can show how much they care for it. Win win for all of us. :p
They are good but how many people realise that they are recycled rF1 mods like so many mods in rF2 - the best Supertouring mod is in GTR2
 
They are good but how many people realise that they are recycled rF1 mods like so many mods in rF2 - the best Supertouring mod is in GTR2
I think we are talking different things. I am talking about Cyrills cars that are to some extend scratch made or authorized AC mods.
 
They may have to remove the BTCC logo/names but the cars themselves aren't owned by TOCA so nothing changes there.
Silverstone license expired long ago, it was a license model made by ISI. Out of current management control afaik. It's similar situation to Project Cars games.
Same with all driving games
---
Wheres AO and his MSG rant, this is when he is not making rants about iRacing and the esport of sim racing

Lastly but a really unpopular opinion from a former ardent supporter - RIP sim racing, I don't see the motivation to buy new games nor new hardware to support it anymore - I will enjoy AC and rF2 while I can until my PC expires
 
This is both good and bad news...

It's good because exclusivity deals are always bad for the consumer in gaming... No matter the genre of sports...

It's bad because it might be another decade before Alan Gow retires or thinks that video game developers are trustworthy enough for him to allow the BTCC brand to be in a video game again...
 
I think when people think BTCC they think really the glory days in the 1990's, now although better than it was several years ago, its full of pay to drive types and the racing is no where near as good as it was. The glamour isn't there IMO for a stand alone game UNLESS it was a game based around the 1990's.
The stuff in RF2 proves that its dull having a whole game based just around modern BTCC.

It won't ever happen.
 
I agree, it doesn't make sense as a standalone game in 2023, financially or otherwise. A paid expansion to an existing game including cars, tracks and rules would be more realistic but unless Alan Gow comes to accept that it seems unlikely to happen.
 
I agree, it doesn't make sense as a standalone game in 2023, financially or otherwise. A paid expansion to an existing game including cars, tracks and rules would be more realistic but unless Alan Gow comes to accept that it seems unlikely to happen.
Agreed. The last really big draw names, Plato and Neal are gone now, the last thing that linked it back to the glory days.
I still follow it but this last season was dull although i watch motorbikes so anything with 4 wheels is dull compared to that.

The reason the last ToCA game is still held in high regard is that it was THAT era, they were proper superstars and superstar cars, the last few years have just been a bunch of drives pimped out to any business owner to pretend to be a racing driver (Andy Neate etc).

Even the support races have gone down hill hence why they have been inviting the Legends cars and the Mini Miglia's because they are always exciting, but if anyone knows of those they are club racing series, so thats how bad IMP its got.

In its hey day ToCA series supported the F1 GB GP. Now its dull cars with some forced hybrid rubbish chucked on because 2023.
Having said that i respect Ingram and Sutton they are way too good for BTCC.
 
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