FIA Mandates Seat Belts for Sim Racing Influencers

FIA Mandates Seatbelts for Sim Racing Streamers.jpg
For the last few years, sim racing has become increasingly popular, leading to the automotive industry and real-life racing teams taking an interest in our favorite hobby. Now, even the FIA is getting involved – likely to the displeasure of a majority of sim racers: The world’s leading governing body for motorsport has mandated seatbelts for every sim racer who live streams their events to comply with the safety-conscious image of the organization starting immediately this Friday.

Just like real-life racing drivers, sim racers serve as role models to the younger generations, which is why the FIA demands compliance with the new rule – no exceptions to be made, as is stated in an extensive paper outlining the importance of sim racing for motorsports as a whole, as well as measures to bring virtual and real racing even closer together.

“Any sim racer who live streams their races or creates video content is required to wear seatbelts in order to comply with the safety-aware image of the FIA and its competitions depicted in racing simulations”, reads the section that is sure to get tempers flaring. While many sim rigs feature racing seats with the needed channels or openings to install a six-point harness, a considerable amount of people use desk chairs, IKEA chairs or other solutions to get their racing fix – their setups will likely not allow them to install the belts in any way.

Banned from online racing​

Furthermore, the FIA instructs simulation developers to act as a monitoring body to ensure the new rule is not ignored: “It is the duty simulation developers/publishers to monitor the compliance of this new regulation and sanction racers who fail to cooperate in this regard, including banning them from racing online.” Even though creating the necessary infrastructure will take time, the FIA insists on enforcing the rule starting immediately this Friday and does not rule out retroactive bans.

The implementation of the seatbelt rule aligns with a new EU regulation that aims to minimize “swearing and other undesirable behavior which carry the possibility of negatively influencing children and adolescents” in broadcasts where groups of up to three individuals would be responsible for the content that is shown. In larger groups, responsibility would be harder to assign, hence the limit.

Supply shortages predicted​

As RaceDepartment understands, the top esports teams and YouTube and Twitch streamers have heard the news in advance and are already preparing to comply with the new rule, with some motion rig users already being up to the new standard due to the included belts. However, this could lead to seat belt shortages for enthusiasts and sim racers that treat the discipline like a hobby, promoting a division between professional and recreational sim racers. For now, the belts will not need FIA certification in order to keep said shortages to a minimum, but the governing body aims to make race-ready seat belts mandatory on any streamer’s rig by 2024.

We will keep you updated on the situation as reactions are sure to be made public quickly during the day. Additionally, we want to know your opinion in the comments: Are you going to comply or do you maybe even have belts already? Is this the end of sim racing streamers as we know them? Let us know what you think in the comments down below.

Download the PDF containing the full FIA statement here.
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
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Lol You should have added that people seen with alcoholic beverages during a stream would have to put a breathalyzer on their rigs. This would include gamermuscle, I am pretty sure his tea is not virgin.
 
Ha.Read it & thought it sounded like the performative b.s. we have all been doing with masks.
Then I remembered the date.
The replies are hilarious.You can rely on sim racers to take things way to seriously.
The mods changed a few messages lmao
 
Premium
its just like mandating a vaccine for a thing that before the shots killed people around age of life expectancy- risk of vax is greater than risk of "deadly" covid. haha

its just like wearing a mask for a virus that is at least 10x smaller than what masks filter

its just like locking down - causing more deaths

ITS ALL SAFETY THEATER
Its just like... April Fools Day!!! LOL
 
Forgot it’s already April 1 in Europe

With virtue signalling being in vogue these days, I wouldn’t be surprised if it happened for real one day
a lot of the people surprised this worked clearly aren't paying attention to the road society is going down today...

Im a guy and Im ovulating today :)
 
Premium
Almost thought there might be some crazy angle to this then remembered the date

Good one :)
 
Executive thread summary:

1. People who got the joke and had a good chuckle
2. People who missed the joke at first, but caught themselves and had a good natured laugh at their own expense
3. People who missed the joke and, in the process, managed to turn it into a pet political rant
4. People who want to argue the finer points of April Fools etiquette

Groups 3 and 4, are also known as the "gee, I bet you are fun at parties" types.
 
It was posted when it turned 1 april in the world. We are a global community and not everybody lives in the same timezone.
I can't believe so many people still don't get this...RD isn't the most popular sim racing site globally from purely European and North American views...It was April 1 in the pacific regions when it was posted...

I guess they wanted it posted on April 1 on PST (West coast USA) so it could be super obvious...not like it'd help since people are still ranting about virtue signalling and the evil FIA over something that's obviously fake. People be crazy yo :roflmao: :roflmao: :roflmao:
 
It's funny reading the angry reactions from people who fell for it and then started making po faced arguments about it not matching their time zone.
 
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Since when has the FIA have authority over content that is streamed online? If people can't tell the difference between sim racing and real racing then they have a problem. Content providers could potentially face a backlash from racers who can't afford to buy the expensive seat belts. Soon we have to a full fire proof race suit and a helmet. :)
 
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