rFactor 2 Online Multiplayer: Ranked Racing Revival

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rFactor 2 has been a staple in the sim racing community since its release in 2013. The online multiplayer experience, however, has been lacking for many years. The rFactor 2 Race Control Beta changes that.

Image credit: Studio 397

Menu & UI Improvements​

The menu has been refreshed and reimagined recently. Most importantly, for the first time ever, rFactor 2 seems to be going down the route of user ease and convenience.

Instead of complex settings hidden behind multiple confusing screens, everything of relevance to the players progression can be found in one tab and across only a handful of menus. This is opposed to the confusing mess that the system was before this revolutionary update.

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rFactor 2’s new Multiplayer UI Layout

The major changes and additions most notably include smooth animations detailing your DR (Driver Rank) and SR (Safety Rank), a progress bar to see how your DR and SR drop or climb after an event and, most importantly, a race results tracker so that you can look back over your performances and analyse your results to your heart’s content.

Is Online Racing Back In rFactor 2?

The short answer is, yes! In the sessions that we tested, the servers were well populated. The practice sessions were clearly labeled and mostly filled with a good level and range of drivers. But most importantly, the servers were stable. The system is not without its problems though.

The only major issue whilst testing was a rare occurrence of the software not recognising that the account was due to join an official session. This only happened whilst the official practice session was coming to an end.

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rFactor 2’s Daily Race Menu

Unfortunately, this required a full game restart, deregistering the user from the race and wasting hours of car and track combo specific practice. rFactor 2 have noted these problems and deployed a hotfix for online features.

Car & Track Combinations​

At the time of writing, the car and track combinations are varied and unusual. Do not expect to see GT3 cars at Spa, try to think more along the lines of Caterhams at Toban Raceway or IndyCars at Donington Park.

The beginner combinations (Tatuus F4, BMW M2 CS and Caterham Academy) switch every hour, with the intermediate series (BTCC and Porsche Regional Trophy) switching every two hours. The advanced series (IndyCar) gets new combos every three hours.

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There are almost unlimited options of car and track combinations with the embracement of the modding community from Studio 397. It looks like it is a really exciting time to be an rFactor 2 player.

In fact, compared to October 5th (the day before the Beta launch), the rFactor 2 online multiplayer revamp’s player numbers are significantly higher. The system looks to be just what the title needed – and should likely serve as a test bed for the upcoming Le Mans Ultimate.

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rFactor 2’s average player numbers peak higher since the launch of the Race Control Beta. Image credit: Steamcharts.com

Are you as excited about the future of rFactor 2 as we are? Check out more rF2 articles here, as well as the official patch notes.

Have you tried the new online multiplayer in rFactor 2 yet? Let us know on Twitter @OverTake_gg and in the comments below!
About author
Connor Minniss
Website Content Editor & Motorsport Photographer aiming to bring you the best of the best within the world of sim racing.

Comments

Premium
The true cost of iRacing is much, much higher than that. Not sure where you got the $5 a month from?
You have read the recent threads that covered it I am sure, you have posted in them. If I wasn't clear I was talking about just the monthly, not the content. The point being, if anyone thinks that some other company will give a complete service like that to service so many people and not expect that its going to cost them something then they have more hope than I think will do them good.
 
Premium
You have read the recent threads that covered it I am sure, you have posted in them. If I wasn't clear I was talking about just the monthly, not the content. The point being, if anyone thinks that some other company will give a complete service like that to service so many people and not expect that its going to cost them something then they have more hope than I think will do them good.
Oh yes, I agree with that. The AWS servers must be costing at least £700-800 a month at the rate they are going currently. There is no way they won't bring in at least a small monthly charge when it's established. But I think most people would be ok with that. I pay around £5 a month to use RCO on AMS2 ( which is not compulsory, I do it because I want to support the service ). I think iRacing grinds peoples gears because they charge a sub and charge you to use the content. All they would need to do to kill off a lot of the complaints would be to stop double dipping.
 
Oh yes, I agree with that. The AWS servers must be costing at least £700-800 a month at the rate they are going currently. There is no way they won't bring in at least a small monthly charge when it's established. But I think most people would be ok with that. I pay around £5 a month to use RCO on AMS2 ( which is not compulsory, I do it because I want to support the service ). I think iRacing grinds peoples gears because they charge a sub and charge you to use the content. All they would need to do to kill off a lot of the complaints would be to stop double dipping.
People forget that S397 helped developing the Grand Tour game wich - suprise, surprise - is a game published by Amazon Game Studios. Maybe the servers aren't as expensive as people think. And on the subject of costs or fees: iRacing asks a subscription fee for everything, including the singleplayer. I don't see S397 going back to a system that ISI ditched for good reason. The singleplayer, the modding stuff and private server hosting for leagues needs to be freely accesible. What grinds my gears about iRacing - and I am sure I am not alone with this mind set - is that I can't used content that I payed for once I stop paying. I can't even run a simple practice lap or offline race because even the singleplayer is presented as a service :rolleyes:. And I find it insane that this is presented as consumer friendly by some people in the sim racing community. Once this get's accepted as normal, then what will be next? That we only get sim cars without tires and that buying those is a service?
 
Premium
iracing is a take it or leave it thing, it's worth it to you or not but for the vast majority I don't think how they charge is an issue, it's just dollars and cents value judgement - is it worth it to the individual?

Because of that I don't understand the statements that it is immoral and similar, which there have been many.

You would think that they continue to have free servers, I think that they will but I was more addressing a hypothetical mentioned that it could get as popular as iracing. If it got that popular don't expect it to be free. There will almost certainly be a free tier but if the user base grew to the point they have to provide the similar hosting that iracing does for the same level of service then it will be money and they will not want that as an ongoing cost. There is no free lunch, its only free right now because they don't offer anything like iracing.
 
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Because of that I don't understand the statements that it is immoral and similar, which there have been many.
There is a group of users, I assume from countries that minimize Capitalism,(or graduates from many of our American Universities) that get upset when ANY company attempts to make money beyond the initial purchase. Whether it is the monthly lease for iR or the DLC packages for many other sims.
Morality has little to do with a commercial transaction. The user should judge for him/her/itself whether the purchase is valued properly. If not, walk on.
 
Premium
There is a group of users, I assume from countries that minimize Capitalism,(or graduates from many of our American Universities) that get upset when ANY company attempts to make money beyond the initial purchase. Whether it is the monthly lease for iR or the DLC packages for many other sims.
Morality has little to do with a commercial transaction. The user should judge for him/her/itself whether the purchase is valued properly. If not, walk on.
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Premium
Honestly, I can't imagine getting so worked up about something I have no interest in.

Why don't you get on and try the new rf2 system for yourself rather than asking anyone else how it is in aussie and posting memes. It seemed ok for me in NZ, it wont take you much longer to try yourself than it is to make the memes.
 
Premium
lmao, I'm pretty happy with those memes.

"seems ok" by New Zealand standards sounds pretty dodgy.

I'd have to buy the game again if I want to try the service, so, yes, asking the question is the best option.
 
lmao, I'm pretty happy with those memes.

"seems ok" by New Zealand standards sounds pretty dodgy.

I'd have to buy the game again if I want to try the service, so, yes, asking the question is the best option.
IF you do decide to re-buy rF2, wait for one of the sales on Steam. And don't bother with ANY DLC until you get the core program working.
 
Premium
I can say that i am having a blast with this update, really happy to race in RF2 online since it has the better physic and FFB. Feels fresh
 

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