Sim Racing Esports RD.jpg
A vast range of sim racing esports events are seemingly falling by the wayside. Our resident sim racing esports enthusiast Luca is saddened by it, and is pondering as to why.

Image credit: Porsche Newsroom

Rewind the clock back to early 2020 when the pandemic began, and it was a dark point for many people. With everyone having to stay home during lockdowns, there was more than enough time on people's hands.

Of course, the motorsport season was kicking off and the drivers who had been extensively preparing to race were now left without any racing. In comes sim racing, where many of them could do it within the comfort of their own home. There, the interest in sim racing exploded.


Fast forward to today, and sim racing esports are a shell of their former selves. Of course, by no means will it ever reach the heights of peak 2020, but the low bar is still too much for many series to overcome.

So what has happened? Why – for one reason or another – are so many sim racing esports championships failing?

F1 Sim Racing​

The first big current mess in competitive sim racing esports, F1 Sim Racing – formerly known as F1 Esports – have really fumbled the ball big time. We should have been four races in to this current season, which began at DreamHack Winter in late November.

But with radio silence even in the days leading up to the start of the season, concerns arose. Then on the day it should have begun, turns out that F1 and the organisers ESL had not finalised the contract and there were still disputes. They compromised and ran the solitary race of the two they were set to run.

Then the second event set for 15-16 December was cancelled. We cannot say for a fact who is to blame for all of this. But with still no official schedule, you have to wonder, what is going on? It seems our guess is as good as the competitor’s guesses.


What is happening would be unprofessional enough from the smaller independent leagues (e.g. PSGL and WOR) but even those guys have a handle on things. Infact with F1 and ESL still allegedly quarrelling, those aforementioned communities are the places to be to see the top F1 Sim Racing competitors.

F1 Sim Racing/F1 Esports had always been consistently the most viewed of all sim racing esports. To see it fall into such disrepute is horrendous, and is really worrying for the wider scene as a whole.

Le Mans Virtual​

We all remember the debacle that was last year’s 24 hours of Le Mans Virtual. It was already a controversial event with the partnership between ACO and the infamous Motorsport Games as it resulted in the canning of the Le Mans 24 hours iRacing Special Event.

Then the race itself was marred by server crashes and disconnects. Even F1’s poster child Max Verstappen was not immune to the ire of rFactor 2‘s issues. He was understandably not happy after they disconnected and all their hard work was moot when the organisers did not give them their lost laps back.


Since then, the announcement of the licenced Le Mans Ultimate game said that the next season of the Le Mans Virtual Series would take place on the new title. Initially set for release in December before now releasing on 20 February, it meant the season would not begin in September when the previous two did.

But of course, we all know where we are going with this. Motorsport Games and their troubles are very well documented, and there are questions now as to whether Le Mans Virtual will happen now if MSG can even survive to the release of Le Mans Ultimate. That is not even considering if the game will be at all playable or up to par quality-wise.

ESL R1​

Now we come to the series on the game that is still in its beta phase. Rennsport came out of nowhere, and all of last year played host to ESL R1. There was enough said about hosting so many rounds with only a select few tracks available, and a few other criticisms including significant pushback due to hosting an event in Saudi Arabia.

But ultimately it all comes down to the fact that Rennsport is still nowhere near being ready for public release. With all the money being poured into R1 but the game not being publicly accessible, one has to wonder why they are doing that. There is no eco-system with the game.


For a closed off series like R1, it is bad enough that the majority of people still do not have access to the game. But for Rennsport‘s second major esports series – the Porsche Esports Carrera Cup Deutschland – it is open for anyone to enter into qualifiers, in theory. But again, with keys only being selectively handed out, that is even more of a slap in the face to those who cannot play Rennsport.

Ultimately, when the game has its open beta release and full release, a lot of the criticisms may subside. Plus maybe people will stop assuming it is just a GT3-only sim like ACC, since there are TCR cars and plans to add an LMDh car.

Gran Turismo World Series​

Next we come to the Gran Turismo World Series, which has been going since 2018. With two primary championships run in that time being the Manufacturers Cup and Nations Cup, it has been hugely successful. Like many series with onsite events, it was heavily affected by the pandemic.

Since then, only four events (two Showdowns and two World Finals) have been onsite. In 2022, that was in tandem with three sets of online broadcasted events but for this year, only two events took place. A far cry from the height of the series, with six onsite events in 2019.


When the 2022 season concluded, we wrote an article on how the GTWS could have stepped up for 2023. But if anything, it regressed with just the two events. Plus, viewers and competitors were not a fan of the shake-up to the Nations Cup format, going from an individuals to a team event.

Of course, Polyphony can only host the number of events they can get the budget for. But if it ends up only being two events again for next year, one must wonder if the GTWS really justifies its existence.

What Is Thriving?​

With the introduction of the onsite SRO Esports Sim Pro Series, Assetto Corsa Competizione‘s flagship championships do not seem to be going anywhere. The ACC community is going from strength-to-strength even with the follow-up to the original Assetto Corsa on the horizon.

Then you have WRC Esports. Even a year without a title due to the WRC licence going from KT Racing to Codemasters, they seem ready to pick up the slack. What these series seem to have are organisers and developers working in somewhat harmony, something that cannot be said for a lot of the previously mentioned series.


NASCAR’s own esports series has incredible investment, with Coca Cola as a title sponsor and Logitech onboard as a brand partner. They even have their finale held onsite in the NASCAR Hall of Fame, with last year’s champion Steven Wilson taking home over $100,000.

All of this proves that there is interest in top level elite sim racing. Yes, it is no secret that with sim racing acting as a way to democratise the experience of racing, people are more willing to want to experience it themselves.

But whilst many members of the sim racing community may rejoice at the ‘esports’ scene crumbling, it is really not such a good thing. For those who bemoan the existence of sim racing esports with “Why would I watch it when I can do it myself?”, why do you not go play football instead of watching the World Cup?


Of course there are plenty of rightful criticisms of the events that are exclusive to pros. The lack of a Le Mans open community event for casual sim racers and a game only accessible to those in esports is an issue. Many sim racers may not enjoy watching those races, but it does not prevent them from enjoying it themselves aside from those aforementioned examples.

For those of you who have forgotten, sim racing is not just a way for those who want to replicate motorsport in their bedrooms, but it is also a viable career path for those who do not have the money to go racing for real.

If anything, the lower entry barrier in sim racing makes it even better than real world motorsport. As it is truly the best drivers who rise to the top, not the ones with a deeper pocket. Sim racing esports deserves better than what is happening right now.

What do you make of the shortcomings befalling many sim racing esports championships? Tell us on Twitter at @OverTake_gg or in the comments down below!
About author
Luca [OT]
Biggest sim racing esports fan in the world.

Comments

I think that the best way to democratize access to sim racing is doing what low fuel Motorsport is doing; host open competitive racing that penalize bad drivers.
I racing is not that open or democratic because of the cost involved to have the needed content to race. Assetto Corsa? Is dirt cheap and the race using the mods are fun; sad that the rfactor2 was dropped because people were not driving in LFM and the current competitive series hold by msg is limited to official content and you fall again to the I racing trap to buy it in order to race.
In the end what ever series survive only if people get involved, and price in sim racing is all ready is a concern.

Esports?, big events with big prices are only in the interest of the publishers that what to showcase their product, I personally loss interest in them.
 
It would be fun if a sim event would be held with drivers not knowing the track and conditions in which they’ll race, have 3 hours for their team to setup everything and racing in unknown conditions. That would bring drama given that not that many people can handle uncertainty.
 
D
Why it even exists in the first place when the real thing is available?
 
Premium
Honestly, I think it's mainly people just rushing to invest into "this new thing that's popular", thus over-saturating the market. And becuase all of them are trying to cash in on the latest fad, the market is over-saturated. Nobody is going to hit their projected profit margins, so now everybody's trying to pull whatever money they still have in there out. It'd be a problem even if sim racing esports retained the popularity it had during the pandemic.

You see this throughout the tech industry: There's this hot new thing, so everybody invests in the hot new thing, because they're afraid to be the ones that *didn't* invest in the hot new thing and lose out on a lot of profits. Then the hot new thing turns into a cold, old thing very quickly, and lots of people who didn't make any of these decisions get fired in order to make up for the losses.
 
D
You see this throughout the tech industry: There's this hot new thing, so everybody invests in the hot new thing, because they're afraid to be the ones that *didn't* invest in the hot new thing and lose out on a lot of profits. Then the hot new thing turns into a cold, old thing very quickly, and lots of people who didn't make any of these decisions get fired in order to make up for the losses.
Sounds like VR few years ago and AI craze today.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Premium
Anything is more exciting than watching people play computer games.
Esports is Volksverarsche ( a joke on the people), as we say in German
 
Premium
Sounds like VR few years ago and AI craze today.
Don't forget the forgetable 3D TV displays. Silicon valley survives on hype but the reality is there has been very little innovation in teh last decade and AI will certainly not innovate.
 
Realistically esports were around long before 2020 and will continue to exist going forwards...

With the costs of servers and racing rigs there's an entry fee to a lot of well run leagues... And as much as the league sim racer in me wants to deny that esports and leagues are closely related I cannot... One is just considered more professional than the other because of the names that are involved...

And that's why esports got popular and is now fading... The names in the esports championships of 2020 were those of the real life participants of the 2019 championships...

Lose a few of those names and people stop tuning in... Add in the shear number of events and what's the point in tuning in when there's real life stuff to watch...

Sim racers for the majority will watch their replays and the replays of their leagues... Even some random youtubers doing a single player season will get more hits from the SP crowd looking for reasons to drive an SP focussed title... And that's after the choices to watch real life racing are exhausted...

Sim Racing esports fans are a bit of a minority on the whole... Far more will watch reviews of sim racing gear than will watch a esports event...
 
Premium
Manufacturers and other brands see F1 as a promotional tool, not an actual race series. That has been the case for years.
Its been this way since they started putting sponsorship adds on cars. For F1 that was the '68 season. But really it goes hand in hand, the more sponsorship the more noise being made. Bigger events mean more visibility and more revenue for sponsor's and series. Seems like a necessary evil!
 
Premium
Its been this way since they started putting sponsorship adds on cars. For F1 that was the '68 season.
Arguably, as long as manufacturers have been involved in racing it's been about promotion. "our company's car is faster then the other companies!" is just simple advertising.

And the practice of "rich people sponsoring a race team for clout" has existed for millennia in horse and chariot racing. We may have exchanged meat for metal, but there's nothing new under the sun.
 
Last edited:
Premium
Arguably, as long as manufacturers have been involved in racing it's been about promotion. "our company's car is faster then the other companies!" is just simple advertising.

And the practice of "rich people sponsoring a race team for clout" has existed for millennia in horse and chariot racing. We may have exchanged meat for metal, but there's nothing new under the sun.
I agree, I did have a bit in my post that said, "before that it was a Dck measuring contest among rich dudes". Then I deleted as I felt it was to long winded. You said it more eloquently anyway! :D
 

Latest News

Article information

Author
Luca Munroe
Article read time
6 min read
Views
6,508
Comments
53
Last update

What would make you race in our Club events

  • Special events

    Votes: 87 30.1%
  • More leagues

    Votes: 58 20.1%
  • Prizes

    Votes: 63 21.8%
  • Trophies

    Votes: 37 12.8%
  • Forum trophies

    Votes: 18 6.2%
  • Livestreams

    Votes: 48 16.6%
  • Easier access

    Votes: 146 50.5%
  • Other? post your reason

    Votes: 42 14.5%
Back
Top