How To Mentally Prepare To Race Online

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Over the last few years, largely inspired by the rising level of interest in esports and the lack of real world motorsport action during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, thousands of people took the plunge into the world of sim racing.

With the initial construction of their rigs and the installation of their chosen sim under their belts, they began to experience the thrill of driving a car on the edge from the comfort of their own home.

Many took the opportunity to drive a car they always dreamed of driving, while others saw it as a valuable opportunity to keep themselves fresh while they were unable to test their own cars in the real world.

What started off as a few laps by themselves on track to get up to speed turned into some offline races against the AI controlled cars. However, few seem to have made the jump into the online world of racing against human opponents, which is a massive shame.

But why is this? What hurdles would there be to prevent people from venturing online?

Well, there are in fact many reasons why this may be the case. These can include a lack of confidence in racing against other sim racers, being worried about ruining another drivers' race through an on-track incident, or simply not having a stable enough internet connection.

So, in order to break down some of these fears and help more sim racers to progress into the world of online multiplayer racing, let’s take a look at how you can prepare to take your skills online and enter your first race.

The Mental Game​

To start off, we are going to forget about the actual driving and take a look at what you can do mentally.

If you find the thought of entering an online race intimidating, you are not likely to ever find yourself on the grid.

The first thing to do, if you feel this way, is to figure out what it is that you find intimidating in the first place. This can be any number of things, but here are a few examples:
  • I may be embarrassingly slow
  • Someone might get angry if I crash into them
  • I will be upset if I don’t win
  • I don’t know what to do to sign up and race
If some of these examples sound familiar to you, then don’t worry, you are not the only one to ever feel this way. There are many who have felt this before. In fact, some of those racing online may still feel this way when they enter a race!

So, what can you do to overcome these fears? Let’s go through these examples above.

What if I am really slow?​

Are you worried that you are going to be outrageously slow compared to everyone else, or that you are going to end up being lapped by most of the field?

Although this may not actually be the case, this is a completely natural feeling to have, so don’t worry. However, the truth is, it really doesn’t matter.

Every single person who races online has a different level of ability. Yes, there are some very quick drivers out there, but there are plenty more who are much slower. It is what makes the racing more interesting.

You also have to remember that there is a wide range of experience on every single grid. Some drivers have been sim racing for years, while others have only just started out.

Nobody is expecting a brand new driver to be leading the field into turn 1 or cruising to the victory by over half a minute. It is the same reason they don’t ask you to perform heel-and-toe downshifting flawlessly as part of your road driving test, it just isn’t expected!

You have to be prepared to accept that, no matter your level of experience, there is always going to be someone out there who is quicker than you. This is even the case at the very top levels of competitive Esports.

It is a fact of life that everyone is going to have a different level of skill to everyone else. If we were all blisteringly fast with not even a sniff of a mistake, then the racing would be extremely boring with no overtaking or action. It is the variety of abilities in a field of drivers that makes racing so exciting.

What if I crash and make someone angry?​

If this sounds familiar, the first thing to do is to accept that accidents happen in motor racing. That is just part of the sport. Indeed, some say that if you don’t crash then you aren’t trying hard enough or that you will never learn anything.

In order to attempt to avoid this situation arising in the first place, the best thing to do is to turn some laps in the particular car and track combo of the race you want to enter.

This will help you to avoid missed braking points or overambitious corner speeds in an online lobby, which can lead to some rather unpleasant situations.

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With the car and track combination fresh in your mind, you will be better prepared to join those other sim racers online.

At this point it is worth mentioning that despite your best efforts and many hours of practice, accidents can and will still happen.

If you do, unfortunately, end up in an altercation with another driver, try to stay calm. Don’t get caught up in heated conversations or any form of retaliation. This will only serve to make your online experience worse and cause you to stay away in the future.

I only want to win​

Let’s be honest, those who love racing are also rather competitive. In most cases, these individuals are there to win. But the reality is, you simply cannot win them all. That is one of the main reasons we keep coming back for more!

The thrill of racing against multiple opponents and coming out victorious is highly contagious. However, this doesn’t mean that you have to be on the top step of the podium to feel like a winner. More often than not, you will end up having a good, close race with at least one other driver. You may even swap places throughout the duration of the race.

When you eventually reach the finish line, regardless of whether you beat them there or not, that feeling of closely matched competition is equally as satisfying as taking a race victory. So, rather than focussing solely on the overall race win, take the time to enjoy the pleasure of having a great race, no matter where in the field you are.

I don’t know how to sign up for a race​

In the early stages of your online career, it can be incredibly confusing to find a place to race, let alone how to enter.

Luckily, there are some very simple ways that you can join a like minded group of sim racers online right here on RaceDepartment!

The first thing to do, once you are a premium member, is jump into the Racing Club forums and find the dedicated area for your chosen sim. From there, you will see a Racing Club section where social and friendly races are organised for:
Simply choose which of the races you would like to join and click on the thread. Once you have read the information about the event, all you need to do is reply with the requested information and you are all signed up

Alternatively, you can sign up to race on the Simracing.GP platform. Here you can select a community that you would like to join and see all the races that you can enter, all in just a few mouse clicks.

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So there you have it. That’s how you can prepare yourself mentally to join the sim racing community online and begin your journey towards an enjoyable racing experience.

The main thing to remember is to not take it too seriously to begin with and just focus on having fun with a group of like minded individuals. Though you may get nervous when you go to the grid for the first time, I can assure you that once that race starts, there will be no looking back.
About author
Phil Rose
A passionate sim racer with over 20 years of virtual and real world motorsport experience, I am the owner and lead content creator at Sim Racing Bible as well as a writer here at RaceDepartment. I love all forms of motorsport, especially historic motorsport, but when it comes to sim racing, I will drive anything!

Comments

Being brutally honest, unless you are in pro Esports team or something this is all nonsense, it's a game at the end of the day, and even then, if you get all het up what for?

I get annoyed in races with mistakes or people driving like belle ends, but not before a game, I dont race in leagues, I tried it, was all a bit huffy, cliquey and anoraky so left it behind, it is just not for me. And not good enough or arsed enough or rich enough to get good at Esports,


I dont even understand why people wear gloves and boots etc, it is a pointless exercise really, but each to their own, makes me laugh when i beat them with a 15 year old wheel on a table an old office chair and a small screen!
 
Premium
Put the kids to bed and lock the man cave.
Then the psycho (ex)wife would just kick the door in...been there, done that...

I race in the Clubs regularly and I would never dream of turning up unprepared. The amount of prep varies depending on time, but once I go online, I always make sure I dont ruin someone else's night. And I do that by being prepared.
 
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You will get into some difficulties trying to define "real race" here.
At least if you are trying to be serious.
Saying this then about one year back I watched an E-Sport race on the rF2 platform.
And the video sequence shifted between the rF2 screen (race) and the live real(!) participation between Jason Button and the older Magnussen (Jan).
Both were driving beautifully using their FFB wheels and race frames.
And they were giving each other a lot more space than casual racing gamers does mandatory.
Afterwards they were greeting each others exactly at they would have done in socalled RL.;)

CatsAreTheWorstDogs: Listening to and watching their live comments and reactions it was quite obvious they were participating in some kind of "real" race.
Hehe at least it was a fully "real" event - just like a RL F1 event is "real".:cool:
Simracing is not a real race with real cars in real tracks with real conditions. Is only for fun or training for a real race.
 
... Only treat AI as they were human. Actually taught me a lot in the beginnning and I turned out to be quite a clean driver from the get go.

This, right here, is the most important piece of learning a new track, in my experience. I see alot of youtube folks that race against AI and treat them as AI. If you go in and race AI as if you have no idea what they'll do next, you'll be far better prepared to race against the non-AI crazies (ie: humans) in no time!
 
The truth is you do get called a loser if you finish last in today's World of ultra competitiveness.
No-one talks to the guys who finish last,it's a boys club.
 
The truth is you do get called a loser if you finish last in today's World of ultra competitiveness.
No-one talks to the guys who finish last,it's a boys club.
This is very dependent on where and with whom you race. I started out with RD club races and always had a good time no matter what my pace was. Top tier stuff will always bring out the competitiveness and get more serious.
 
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My tactic is pointing out loud that I'm racing naked...
That's no fancy technical jargon, I'm literally naked while riding my ridicolous sim-racing set-up.
You know, summer's here.
Everything's funnier when you are dressed as mama made you and all the aliens are intimitaded by my libertine behavior.

#ProudlyHairy #CrotchchlessSimRacing

(just kidding btw, but it is definitely a possibility so beware)
 
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RD have been good to me but I can't find the time.

My last RD race was 5am in the morning,eyelids held up by toothpicks lol.

I was 33 in 99 when GPL came out so there is the age factor.

Young whippersnappers flying around you who had the tools to race while I had an Atari in my youth,no internet,no mobile phones and no sim gear.

Learning simracing in your teens is a huge advantage.
 
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Simracing is not a real race with real cars in real tracks with real conditions. Is only for fun or training for a real race.
Your comment does only show that you dont have a clue about defining "real" vs "non-real" in a time where virtual "realism" gets a more and more dominant status in what is called "reality".

CatsAreTheWorstDogs: But to not waste mine and others time on some kind of childish ping pong between you and me this is end of story.:cool:
 
I race in the Clubs regularly and I would never dream of turning up unprepared. The amount of prep varies depending on time, but once I go online, I always make sure I dont ruin someone else's night. And I do that by being prepared.
I have to admit that I respect this attitude much more than guys who without much preparing try to use the "argument" that I just participate for fun - because this is just a game.

You often also see such "fun guys" moaning because they feel more serious drivers consider them "loosers".

CatsAreTheWorstDogs: When I was younger I used a lot of my time on the national highest level in a sport called badminton. And one of the reasons this was extremely cool was that the level was so high that we all did know that every competitor was a person who was into this for real (= in opposition to only for fun).
 
Sorry. Re-reading my post above I think my CatsAreTheWorstDogs part can be slightly misunderstood.
My use of the english term "for real" in "was into this for real" does hopefully mean in english that a person goes all in into something.
Hehe Im pretty good to english but its not my 1st language :roflmao:
 
I'd say that the very very very first tip should be to install Crew Chief, so you'll be notified where other cars around you are.
 
Really interesting article, and very useful.

I fall into the category of not racing on line very much. I'd agree there is some pressure when you are pencilled in for an event, it makes it all very official, and just joining a random event is like a leap into the unknown.
You have no idea what skill level you are against, if people are running fine tuned setups and your not, or if there are special rules applied. Being new can be daunting.
But if you get a few races under your belt, all that goes away and you are there to race and enjoy it. So why the hell do I spend most of my time racing some what predictable AI?

I don't have a sim rig ( No space in small house) , so when I do want to race, I have to get everything setup. Racing from a Costco chair (some times for 4 hours or more) is not the most comfortable thing. I never notice at the time :) Its after that I feel broken.
When I am ready to race, I can't wait a few hours for a race to come along, In that time window I'm ready to go, and setting your own race up against AI is just so convenient, and the racing is actually very good if you really dial in the AI to just be out of your comfort zone.
I often want to race completely different cars to the norm, so if its not GT3 then online its really hard to find what your looking for.
I've often thought about joining a league, but find that the schedule really does not fit. A lot of the sims have a certain online requirement, so if you just race casually offline you have not built up the criteria to race online.
I also make YouTube videos on various things, so my racing time is normally when I'm making a racing video.

Just something to note about racing games. Simper racing games, have online lobbies that are more sprint races, that just rotate sets of circuits, they are not very complicated and its easy to drop in, and pick up the pace.

Sim racing is far more complex, and if you have the setup and time to invest its far more rewarding, but the actual prep and accessibility is certainly a hurdle you have to jump over to get established.
 
Premium
About 95% of my online racing has been in leagues. I have always prepared for these races, mostly because I can't just jump in and drive on most tracks. Even for tracks I know well, I still need around an hour of total practice before the race just to familiarize myself with the car/track combo.

As others have noted, a lot of this depends on how you define "fun." I don't expect to win, but I want to be in the upper third. For me, that takes some preparation and I enjoy the prep. I also want to be familiar enough with the track that I don't mess up anyone else's race. Again, that takes some prep for me. If I don't want to prep, I don't do league races.
 

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