Luke Whitehead: Meet The 24-Hour Solo Sim Racer Who Finished 3rd

Luke Whitehead ACC N24 solo.jpg
Image credit: @LukeW_Racing on Twitter / Kunos Simulazioni
To celebrate the launch of the Nürburgring 24h pack on Assetto Corsa Competizione, publishers 505 Games teamed up with LFM for a 24 hours event. In that race, one competitor did the unthinkable.

With the start of the NLS, endurance racing season at the Nürburgring-Nordschleife has well and truly kicked off. Slowly but surely, also due to the 24H Qualifier events held on April 13 and 14, the excitement for the legendary Nürburgring 24 Hours is starting to build.

24-hour racing is a unique challenge, as you are not only battling the other competitors but also fatigue, the environment and countless other factors. Typically, one will do these races in a relay with other drivers in a team. But that is not to say there have not been a few crazy attempts at doing it solo.

Le Mans in 1950, Eddie Hall finished 8th without handing over to his teammate once. Two years later, Pierre Levegh very nearly won before he suffered an engine failure in the last hour with a four lap lead. Nowadays, solo 24-hour driving is explicitly forbidden in real endurance racing. But not in sim racing.


Luke Whitehead is a Veloce Esports ACC pro driver, having won five straight championships in the Apex Online Racing league, two LFM Pro Series titles and an SRO GT World Challenge America title. He decided to do the impossible, tackle the 24 Hours of Nürburgring launch event solo.

24 hours Solo Against Pros​

Just to put it into perspective, the drivers taking part in the event were also high-calibre ACC pros. Other Veloce drivers in the event included the likes of reigning SRO GT World Challenge Europe champion George Boothby, Gran Turismo World Series Nations Cup runner-up Angel Inostroza and content creator Jardier.

Ferrari and Williams fielded their top ACC division teams, and even streamer Marco 'Mabix' Bischoff competed with the Sprout team. The strength of field was incredibly high, and Luke knew this, so he fully expected that the best he could hope for was a top ten finish at a major stetch.


A more realistic expectation Whitehead had was getting to 16 hours of the race and just calling it and immediately resting. In fact, just four hours into the race, he began feeling drowsy.

"I had done four hours non-stop driving before in an SRO event, it was the most I had ever done. After doing that, I looked at the timer and realised there was still 20 hours left and I was like 'Oh..'.

That was when it really dawned on me that I was having to drive non-stop with very minimum mistakes because I did want a decent result. Also considering the toilet breaks, I had my first about six hours in and I knew that I had to do it relatively frequently.

Every two to three hours it would get tougher but it was once the sun rose on the second day with about eight or so hours to go, it became a lot easier. Then with two hours to go, my brain started playing tricks on me and I was almost passing out down the straights."



During the height of Whitehead's hallucinations, he recalls hearing the likes of James May and Jason Statham taunting him for missing apexes. His mother even came in and put a wet towel on his face to keep him awake in the latter part of the race. Of course, the race was not without its incidents with him being as fatigued as he was.

Luke had a few excursions and got some heavy damage at around ten hours in. The front headlights were flickering whenever he braked heavily which coupled with how exhausted he was, it was immensely off-putting and blinding, so he was forced to pit early to deal with it. But then not long after he left the pits, he had another major crash. Thankfully, that was the worst of it.

Whitehead concedes that sim racing for 24 straight hours is nowhere near as impressive as doing it in real life. But during the days where solo 24 hour racing happened, the drivers were having to take it easy and ensure car parts do not wear out. Whilst in sim racing, drivers are pushing every lap, so this added a different kind of challenge to Luke's effort.

"In ACC, you don't get damage from taking the kerbs, it hurts you in the rig since you are holding a steering wheel but if you need to hit a kerb to gain time, you will. With all these teams being as strong as they are and obviously having their swaps, they are going to be performing on all cylinders pretty much the whole race.

After 20 hours, I am not going to be performing at that level so it makes trickier to be fighting with these guys. Makes it even more surprising to me that I was even in the fight for the podium."



Finishing P3​

In spite of everything, Whitehead somehow ended up finishing third. Many average joe sim racers may have done a 24-hour event solo but, typically it does not involve a field of drivers who are at such a high level, and they may end up multiple laps down from the lead.

The spoils may have gone the way of Into The Breach who took victory and also second went the way of the Unicorns of Love team, but it was Whitehead who quite literally made the headlines for his outstanding attempt. When asked why he did it, Luke was very nonchalant with his answer.

"I mean, why not? Doing a 24 hour race solo was something I had always wanted to do, and the prospect of doing it on the Nordschleife, it is the biggest challenge. I'll stream it, will be good content, honestly I didn't think many people would care. Thought it would be a fun little gimmick, but I never expected it to become what it was.

It became so much more. It was a pleasant surprise, and a fitting tribute to my aunt's dog Feena, who passed away a couple of days before the event."


Would you attempt to do a 24 hour race solo? Let us know on Twitter @OverTake_gg or in the comments down below.
About author
Luca [OT]
Biggest sim racing esports fan in the world.

Comments

Premium
Respect and congratulations to Luke for finishing this 24hr event and getting a Podium.
Awesome performance, hard to believe but he proofed it.

And no, this is not unhealthy or all the other arguments against it.
Unhealthy would be to this once in a week or every 3 days or so. But not once i a life or year
It is extreme and hard for the body and head, and you really have to deal with your self, your mindset on several points during the time you do it.
In the end, he learned for sure a lot about himself pushing his mind and body to and maybe bejoined his limits.

Will i try to do this by myself? No, its just to extreme. I have done endurance bike events over 8-10-12hr without rest(just toilett and grabbing some food) I don't need this again. But i'm proud i did it because as said i learned about myself.
Will other do try this. Maybe, but that would be their choice.

Did Luke take anything away from simracing, did he something against the community doing this?
No, he was allowed to do it. The race was a fun event, no points, no money to grab and so no risk of taking away from others in anyway.

On the Sunday he got mentioned it the NLS2 livestream, he and the event itself.
For simracing that was more positive than negative, there was a lot of respect and good talk about him and simracing.
 
That should be banned. It is unhealthy, a miserable experience, and stupid. This is going to promote other top simracers to try compete to win the chad way as if it was the ultimate achievement to win a high profile 24h event all by themselves. And when people are competing for ego you know that someone is going to go beyond reason and use some kind of unhealthy substances to keep themselves awake and to keep attention.

Simracing is making a mistake if they let that legal void open that risk hurting competitors health for no reason other than publiticy and bragging rights. This is not the 1950's when top drivers drove under WW2 military stimulants effect to sharp their senses and avoid feeling tired.
What? like china enforcing how many hours people can play videogames?

People should have to learn to manage themselves and do what they want with their own bodies as long as it is not affecting other people. How many things do you want restricted ?
 
What? like china enforcing how many hours people can play videogames?

People should have to learn to manage themselves and do what they want with their own bodies as long as it is not affecting other people. How many things do you want restricted ?
I hope you are aware that your comment is pretty dumb. There are warnings in most video games nowadays that people should take a rest after a certain time. Most of us propably don't take it as seriously as we should and there is a reason why more and more people are wearing glasses. This hasn't anything to do freedom of gaming or some other bs but acting responsible and showing that gaming for such a long period of time isn't good for anyones health, no matter what the consequences might be - could just be an expileptic attack for all to watch on Twitch. I watched a stream by another YT in the same race and I had the impression that other teams were required to keep the stint length at one hour. It's not a big issue to enforce this part of real endurance. We aren't in the 50s or 60s anymore ... :rolleyes:
 
I don't have any strong feelings about this feat, but personally I only want to play racing games in a condition I'd be allowed on the track. Like if I deal with a bout of insomnia, it just feels nightmarish to be driving. And the way my force feedback is set, I'd risk injury if I didn't have some concentration. Sometimes I feel like tuning it down but it would feel like cheating when I see real drivers wrestle with steering in something like a GT3. An hour at the wheel feels like a lot to me but you challenge yourself whatever way you feel like.
 
I hope you are aware that your comment is pretty dumb. There are warnings in most video games nowadays that people should take a rest after a certain time. Most of us propably don't take it as seriously as we should and there is a reason why more and more people are wearing glasses. This hasn't anything to do freedom of gaming or some other bs but acting responsible and showing that gaming for such a long period of time isn't good for anyones health, no matter what the consequences might be - could just be an expileptic attack for all to watch on Twitch. I watched a stream by another YT in the same race and I had the impression that other teams were required to keep the stint length at one hour. It's not a big issue to enforce this part of real endurance. We aren't in the 50s or 60s anymore ... :rolleyes:
Food in excess can harm you, but you also should be able to control yourself or live with the consequences if you don't. Same logic can be applied to consuming anything in excess. But gaming in excess is far from something like drugs or cigarettes. Expecting restrictions over something like videogames is utterly stupid, which renders your comment dumber than mine. If you want to risk your own health gaming, then that's your decision. Why should it fall on any gaming or governmental body to restrict that?
"Oh this could be dangerous to the one single person deciding to do something, let's restrict this".
Well news for you. Motorsports itself is in essence unnecessary and dangerous, why not just stop people driving really fast in circles completely?
 
Out of all the 'excess' things you can do in life I don't think this is a big deal. I remember going to Gatecrasher and taking a load of speed but it was uncut and I didn't sleep for about 3 days. I was up for 24hr+ a fair bit in my younger days.

I can't even drive more for than about 20 minutes and need to try a different car or track combination. God knows how you manage 24hrs on ACC.
 
sorry the guy didn’t find any friend or didn’t trust any friend to enjoy a 24 hour video game race. And yes, it’s unhealthy, in all ways. But when you are young you do stupid things. Shame, as other said, ovettake’s approach. I let a friend to do a 5 hour stint and I was feeling such a monster. Not saying the guy that playing a video game 24 hour in a row is not good, is not loving him enough.
 
Premium
sorry the guy didn’t find any friend or didn’t trust any friend to enjoy a 24 hour video game race. And yes, it’s unhealthy, in all ways. But when you are young you do stupid things. Shame, as other said, ovettake’s approach. I let a friend to do a 5 hour stint and I was feeling such a monster. Not saying the guy that playing a video game 24 hour in a row is not good, is not loving him enough.
Oh on the contrary. He had plenty of friends that he was communicating with. Many of whom would have been willing to do the event with him.

This insinuation that anyone who does something you look down upon has no friends is hilarious.
 
Your article is hilarious. I’m ironic, not like you. But everything is ridiculous around this challenges. That much ridiculous. And yes, I’m a health worker, spend half of my life on it, and what Luke did is not healthy. But he is not 20 yet, he can even try harder things to look for his limits. But I hope he starts to get good friends around to give him GOOD advices
 
These comments are hilarious. Someone choosing to solo a VIRTUAL 24 hour race in a VIDEO GAME is somehow detrimental to our hobby and needs to be banned. People have been doing this for years in iRacing and other games I'm sure. I can promise it's had no impact on your life or your ability to enjoy sim racing. Bunch of Karens here I guess.
 
Premium
These comments are hilarious. Someone choosing to solo a VIRTUAL 24 hour race in a VIDEO GAME is somehow detrimental to our hobby and needs to be banned. People have been doing this for years in iRacing and other games I'm sure. I can promise it's had no impact on your life or your ability to enjoy sim racing. Bunch of Karens here I guess.
I would be onboard if it was a real life event, because someone's fatigue would be a danger to others there.
 
Health Police. Ok. This is nonsense. The article itself, the 24 hour solo challenge and most of the comments. Ah, and the writer himself considering that the people trying to put some common sense for the kids reading and watching this kind of challenges are "a bunch of Karens". It's been my last visit to "overtake".
 
Staff
Premium
Umm, been a lot of focus on "who was he hurting other than himself?" and his health being his own business, etc. I'm very happy for people to differ with me on that, since there's clearly an argument to be made on that point.

However, I haven't seen a single post debunk the other main plank of my concern (but maybe I missed a solid counter-argument so please quote it if so): taking out other drivers.

All of you free-spirited folks, can you please let me know how chilled you'd be about sharing the track with a hallucinating, sleep-deprived driver, when you're 23 hours into a 24-hour race? And how chilled you'd be if you got wrecked by him?
 

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