Sim Racing: Why do we do it?

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Let’s be honest, if you are reading this article, the chances are that you are either already involved in sim racing or are looking to get started.

For those who are already turning virtual laps, you will already have a good idea about what you love most about our hobby.

But for those who are looking at starting out, you may be wondering, what is it about sim racing that keeps you coming back for more?

Well, let’s explore this question some more by diving into 5 key points.

Competition

For some, the main draw card of sim racing is the ability to scratch that competitive itch.

There are so many virtual arenas where you can go toe-to-toe with drivers from all over the world. Whether that be in organised events or leagues, public lobbies or even hot lap competitions.

If you have the desire to put your skills to the test or simply enjoy some good hard racing, there are so many avenues that you can explore.

Of course, there are the higher echelons of professional Esports competitions and the eye-watering prize funds which they offer. But for the vast majority of sim racers, there are some great races to be found in the organised world of iRacing, the ranked servers of RaceRoom Racing Experience or daily races on Assetto Corsa Competizione.

If, for you, the best thing about sim racing is the competition element, there are no shortage of options to suit every interest and skill level.

Relax and Unwind

On the flip side of that, some sim racers keep returning to their physical and digital drivers seat as a form of relaxing after a long, arduous day at work or school.

There is sometimes nothing better than to leave the cares of the world behind you and immerse yourself in a different world. A world where it is just you, your car and the road ahead. Nothing else matters.

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Some will still find pushing a race car as hard as possible around a track, or a rally car through a stage flat out to be a relaxing and therapeutic experience. But for others, this relaxation takes a different shape in the form of cruising.

There are some sim racing titles that offer a much more laid back option to those who seek refuge from the rigors of daily life. For example, there is an increasing number of point to point, or real life road mods which have appeared for Assetto Corsa over the last few years. These allow you to take a favourite sports or supercar for a thrash down idyllic public roads without a care in the world. In fact you can even join others online and go for a therapeutic cruise with friends and strangers.

Live For Speed is another title that has a very active cruising scene. One that has been reinvigorated with the introduction of modded cars to the legendary title. The variety of cars and vehicles that you will find on various cruise servers really makes for an enjoyable online experience.

Social

Speaking of the online experience, for some sim racers what keeps them coming back for more is the group of friends that they have come to know in the community, especially right here at RaceDepartment!

Sim racing is fun in general, but sim racing with friends is even better. The camaraderie, banter and enjoyment that can be found, particularly in the RD Racing Club, is a major part of sim racing for a lot of people and it is easy to see why.

You don’t even need to be on track to participate in the social element of sim racing, as many enjoy sharing their experiences or opinions on sim racing forums or groups. Some also love to discuss the hardware they use or seek advice on upgrades or optimisation, which brings us on to our next point.

Personalising Your Rig

Many who have been involved in sim racing for some time will know that you don’t just buy a sim racing setup and then keep it the same forever.

There is always something that you are looking to upgrade, change or add to your sim racing cockpit. Whether that is a new wheel, pedals or even a cup holder, there is always something else that you can find to make your sim rig even more personal to you. In fact, with the advancements in sim racing products of late, this constant search for upgrades is showing no sign of slowing down.

Now it’s worth pointing out at this point that simply throwing money at your sim rig will not necessarily make you a faster driver, but what it does do is provide a level of joy and satisfaction in putting something together that you are truly proud of.

Improvement

Speaking of trying to become a faster driver, another of the main things that draws us back in is a constant search for improvement.

Regardless of whether we have been sim racing for 20 years or 20 minutes, there is always something new we can learn. Something that we can improve on.

Whether it be our braking technique such as trail braking or heel and toe, our standing starts, or even wet weather driving, we can always find some improvement somewhere.

It is that underpinning desire to become better which makes us say “just one more lap” over and over again for the next half an hour or more.

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These are just a few examples of what makes us keep firing up our computers and head out behind the wheel. But how about you? What is your sim racing addiction fuelled by? Let us know in the comments below.
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

I enjoy the challenge of getting a car through a corner at the limit. The precision and finesse. The patience and determination. To me that car control part of simracing is just amazing and it is fun sometimes to just do one combo for tens or hundreds of laps. In most games that kind of repetition is usually a boring grind but somehow in simracing it is just fun and feels fresh everytime. It feels fun, rewarding and challenging.

Sometimes it is frustrating. Doing tens of laps and not seeing an improvement. Doing hundreds and snipping tenths here and there. Knowing you have half a second but struggle to put it together. Sometimes you just keep nailing those corners and purple font appears everywhere.

And with racing it gets even better. There is the tactical side of overtaking and defending. When to be brave, when to back off. When to wait and when to push. Preparing for the switchback knowing the other driver is doing the same. Trying to outsmart the opponent but not yourself. The feeling of having done a great pass, or the misery when things go awry. The race to get those absolutely perfect at the limit laps when trying to catch the car ahead. Or trying to pull away from the car behind.

Then there is the challenge of learning new tracks and cars. Learning modding and skinning. Driving different sims and trying new things. Ovals, dirt ovals, super speedways, rallycross, gt3, nords, prototypes, fwd hatchbacks, historical content, no wings, all downforce, no power, all the power.

So to me the driving is fun. The racing is even better. And all the other things you can do. No matter whether I watch to drive a 917k at nordschleife, gt3 at spa or make my own dream track and drive it in any car I want. Taking part in a race in my own painted car. Or just hotlapping and learning a new sim, new car or track.
 
It's not the actual experience of driving the real car, but my chances of ever running a real life Ford Escort RS 1600 or an MB 190 Evo2 DTM anywhere are quite slim, and simracing is the next best thing really.
I think(!) I agree with you here.
Because just like 1st person shooters has absolutely nothing to do with the "horror" feeling of being in a real war - then "driving" a virtual car is quite another ballgame (completely other "world") than driving even the most humble RL racing car.

But this doesnt imply that the immersion factor behind ones plastic wheel cannot be enourmously :D

Conserning this "immersion factor" then one of my former olderly friends in iRacing had got a prohibition from his doctor against participating in iRacings races - because of bad hearth.
He did obey - somewhat - but admitted to me that he did still silently turn the wheel - in practice.
A few days later he died of a hearth attack.
Absolutely no joke - but the addiction because of the "immersion factor" can be enourmously.
 
Because video games are addictive.

Or because we are masochists.

Or because we are frustrated wannabe race drivers, or too scared to actually do the real thing.

Pick one!
 
Staff
Premium
Most of the things you stated in the main article. But on top of that I like the creative challenge of finding interesting combo's for championships and single for the races that I organize in AC for RaceDepartment. I also like the interaction on Discord or the thread posts with the participants.
 
Premium
I do it primarily to bring forgotten race tracks back to life, and then to race unobtainable cars around those circuits.

There aren't many hobbies where you can first make the thing that you want to use, before using it in your hobby, but also share it with others as well.

For me, modding always comes first. Racing is just a way to 'test' my tracks.
 
My answer is simple. I do it for fun. I am 30 this year, always loved video games and I loved cars. Unfortunately I'm born in a country where import taxes are hell for cars and I'm not rich.

Simracing takes me away from the depressing reality of my life. When I'm in the sim, all I think of is the next corner and the corner after that. I like the feeling of the wheel resisting as I push my car into the Apex carrying as much speed as I can and holding the wheel as I hit the Apex and go as near to the kerb or the wall as I exit the corner. It is one of those rare activities where I can get into the zone and just disconnect from everything else as I try to push lap after lap to be quicker. It is just the most fun I can have without spending money outside.
 
It has more to do with growing up playing racing games than being a car person. It's just a beautiful combination of technology, skill and history, whether it's car racing in the real world or in the virtual. But it starts with games for me.

In some way I am chasing what I once experienced playing Geoff Crammond's F1 titles, Grand Prix Legends, Sega Rally, Gran Turismo etc. and I am doing rather well. There's always the child in me reminding me to appreciate that games are getting where I could only dream they would get.

I appreciate games that are not essentially violent but offer all the thrills of an action game and all the tactics of a strategy game. It's about challenging myself and improving, and even on days I am not going anywhere, it's a way to gauge where my head is at. On a good day, I immerse myself in another world and all my mental capacity goes into keeping the car on track.

The immersion aspect has become ever bigger since discovering VR. It's not just an activity; it's an experience, at first dizzying and overwhelming, now very natural but no less enticing.
 
I think the most important thing is missing: to play!

And no, I don't mean that it's just games, but as children do, we try to emulate some reality through play. We look for laserscanned tracks, load gigabytes of mods to recolour kerbstones or get the complete field of Le Mans 2001 together because we want to take part in something that fascinates us. Who knows how far we will go, some of us even get into the real thing at some point.

In short, Schiller said it best: "Der Mensch spielt nur, wo er in voller Bedeutung des Worts Mensch ist, und er ist nur da ganz Mensch, wo er spielt."
(Humans only play, if they are human in the full sense of the word, and they are only completely human, while they play). I hope the translation makes sense, feel free to add...
 
Besides modding itself, many people get chance to make mods themselves. And some get really creative. And many learn a lot of things in physics, design, even reverse engineering and so on, even lurkers can learn something. Arcade racers these days rarely have that level of engagement unlike in early 00s when it was similar.
 
I guess you are not actually interested in the answer - only want to quarrel.
But I have been way more than just to a track day.
In my younger days I tried to make a career in FF1600 - so maybe I knows a few things about this ... :roflmao:

Your projecting your own feelings of failure to be a racing driver through lack of funds or talent or both.
You are assuming that every sim racer is a failed racing driver.
I am saying its certainly not true in my case.
I certainly think sim racers need a certain passion for motorsport, but what is it with people thinking every kid wants to race cars?
I certainly never dreamed of that.
But i adore sim racing.
Step back and look at things from another perspective.

There is for sure this idea that sim racers all want to be racing drivers. Its not true.
Then there is the further thing that the most popular is F1 so people wrongly think every racing driver wants to be in F1 when actually ask a NASCAR driver what he dreamed of doing.... guess what, its NASCAR. etc etc.
 
I never race, neither online nor offline, so the competition factor is not for me. I always use my rig for the pleasure of sport driving. For me, the goal is to feel something. Very few videogames are able to make me want to play them. They need to make me feel intense sensations, such as my reflexes pushed to the limit while dancing on a cloud of thousands of bullets thanks to a perfect digital control (shoot'emp up) or that sensation when you play a terror walking simulator that creates an atmosphere that inspire fear on me (almost impossible, but combined with VR it's getting close in some cases) or... making me believe that I am really doing something that I would love to do in the real world, such as driving a sport car, feeling in the car, controlling it and getting the most realistic behaviour and response thanks to a good setup in which I have invested a lot of money. That's what I look in videogames nowadays: moments of intense experience. In sim racing, there are many elements that help in that sense: force feedback, motion, tactile, VR, good physics, good graphics, good sound... Now I'm very hard to impress and I can't find that level of immersion that a child (or a friend of mine) can achieve, which is a shame. However, I still can find moments when my heart beats fast when trying to break a lap time record, or when I have almost lost control of my car but I am able to save it. The technology available, the limitations of the hardware and also the so-so quality of the games kill the inmersion and the ability to feel impressed or have fun, but even so, simulation is the best way to come close to intense experiences with a computer, at least for me.
 
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Your projecting your own feelings of failure to be a racing driver through lack of funds or talent or both.
You are assuming that every sim racer is a failed racing driver.
I think we have Dr. Phil II here.
Thanks for the free teraphy session - I feel allready better.:thumbsup:

Note: The day after I even feel Much better :roflmao:

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I demand "Car Pr0n" to be included between the reasons, in the main article.

No need to prove me wrong, 672 versions of the latest BMW in AC and the whole existence of the FH series are solid proof.
 
Premium
We started racing on a computer long ago as a game. My son wanted a racing game. It took us one day to realize we could not do without a steering wheel and another day to buy a second steering wheel and racing against each other on two computers. For us it was racing from the beginning. If we can not do it in real life, this is second best. Later on, when my son started karting in real life, it also became practicing for racing in in real life, and it still is. The days are gone when we raced every day against each other. Now he is way to fast for me.
Now he approaches an online sim race as if it is a race in real life. Of course sim racing is not exactly the same as racing in real life but it has a lot in common.
I spent most of the time building tracks and at the end of the day I like to drive as fast as possible in whatever car and on whatever track comes into my mind. That can be hotlapping or racing against AI. It gets my head empty so I can sleep better.
 
Obviously for the chicks, why else would you do it. We all know they love it when we go sideways in a car, even if it's virtual. (OG) Top Gear proved it.

I like to virtually drive the cars of my youth again, (GOlf GTI MK2, BMW E34, Porsche 924S) those that I had and those that I dreamed of (BMW M3, Porsche 911, Audi Quattro Sport).

That's neat, being from NL, the cars I grew up with were all bicycles....



@Nitro McClean
Awesome dad award!
 
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