What's one tip you would give fellow simracers?

20230426145308_1.jpg
More and more racing fans become simracers everyday. But our community is a complex one that can leave newcomers like a bunny in the headlights. What is one tip you would give fellow simracers?

Image credit: Kunos Simulazioni

The simracing community is certainly a growing one. Less so than in the height of the pandemic, but more and more racing fans are still making their way to the hobby of pretending to drive.

Such growth means many newcomers are entering the hobby with little to no experience. A long list of games one can try out, countless pieces of hardware and many accessories one can buy and an online community that can arguably appear somewhat toxic. Simracing is most definitely not the easiest of hobbies to get in to.

That's what this little piece is all about. It's time to put down the pitchforks, settle the debates and throw on an aura of positivity. Surely we all know someone that's attempting to get in to simracing and we'd all want them to have a good first experience of the hobby. So what would be one tip you would give your fellow simracer?

mazda race (1).jpg


This doesn't have to focus on newbies. In fact, judging by iRacing voice chats and countless Discord server rants, it seems many a simracer would love to provide other experienced enthusiasts with their advice. Although these rants often turn out to be attacks rather than constructive.

Advice from a writer​

As usual with this type of discussion, I will leave my take on the matter here.

As a simracer that has often enjoyed online competition, I am starting to lose motivation for competitive online services. This is mostly due to a concern when it comes to the safety ratings they offer.

Screenshot_ks_porsche_911_gt3_r_2016_ks_nordschleife_7-2-123-13-53-17.jpg


Before entering a race, I frequently worry that a fellow racer will take me out, handing me half a dozen incident points. On the other hand, I fear I could ruin other racers' fun by causing incidents myself. Wanting for everyone to have a good time, this can often be a burden on one's mind when racing.

But if you see the bigger picture, you shouldn't have to worry about incident points or ratings. Be it online, in leagues or offline. Race because it's what you want to do rather than to chase rating points. Certainly don't stop yourself from participating or having fun in fear of losing safety rating. It can always be recovered in later races. Stop focusing on the numbers when racing.

What advice would you give your fellow simracers?
About author
Angus Martin
Motorsport gets my blood pumping more than anything else. Be it physical or virtual, I'm down to bang doors.

Comments

I found the easiest to get into sim to be Assetto Corsa. It also has tons of expansion later on.
Top advice be smooth, or as smooth as your hardware allows. Also top advice is have fun, thats what its all about. I still only use an old TSW2 wheel and pedals, with no FFB, so you don't need the latest and greatest. I wouldn't even try online for awhile.
Also try some track days in real cars, but just remember theres no reset button. If you ever get the racing bug for real, try formula vees, they are a blast to drive and not too expensive.
 
Racing offline you only have yourself to blame.
Doing online racing you only have yourself to blame.
 
Premium
I'm gonna say it... If you're truly faster than the person infront of you, wait for a safe place to pass.

There's a lot of whiners out there who will expect you to move aside when you're both on the lead lap. (especially those D-bags who start at the back of the grid in ACC on purpose)
 
Pick a slow opponent then follow him around the track a couple times to learn the lines. My general rule for cornering is slam on the brakes when you see the 50 sign and then fine tune that on the next pass
 
Respect the FOV police
I never understood why some people get so uptight about how other people set up their FOV.

Lets see if I can ruffle some feathers here. I have my eyes 28cm from my screen which is 27" and I use 64*.

So I guess a tip I may give would be set up your FOV to whatever is comfortable and feels natural.
 
Be open to new experiences and try new things. Drifting can be super fun. Touge can be super fun. Oval racing can be super fun. And when you try new things make sure you give it a proper attempt. Don't just do couple of laps and think you have seen it. You may find something you never thought you'd like but it turns out it is super fun. Stepping outside your comfort zone can be a culture shock especially if you have just driven single car in certain type of races for long time. But it is well worth it.

When you try new things one thing you learn is that there is depth to everything. There is usually always something you learn that also makes you a better racer. In rallycross you have to learn how to take really tight corners and how to manage the weight of the car. In oval racing you learn how to take really fast corners without braking and sliding too much. In rally you have your pacenotes, in f1 and lemans protos you have your electrical gizmos. In endurance racing you have your long term strategy and consistency. In historical race cars you have less aero which means you need to be careful with throttle even in high speed corners. And so forth.

It all adds up and the more you have seen and done the more you have learned. Most of it makes you faster in other cars as well. But more importantly it is fun. Doesn't really matter what sim it is. Try the gt4s in acc. Try drifting and touge in ac. Try the formulas in raceroom. The oval stuff in iracing. The rallycross in ams1. The historical race cars in ams2. Sometimes you suprise yourself. Driving just one thing is just a guarantee you are missing out.
 
I never understood why some people get so uptight about how other people set up their FOV.

Lets see if I can ruffle some feathers here. I have my eyes 28cm from my screen which is 27" and I use 64*.

So I guess a tip I may give would be set up your FOV to whatever is comfortable and feels natural.
Because "some people" are always the ones being taken out because the high FOV racers cannot judge distances around them correctly (both ahead and also aside), so "slightly too late braking" turns into "massively too late". The same goes for unnecessary swerving on the straight or not leaving space in a corner, which is often happening because you're correcting (or assuming) your own wrong interpretation of the situation all the time.

I've heard it countless times, as community staff and reading here, that "it doesn't matter", you lose the sense of speed, you can't look around you and that everyone should be able to do their own thing bla bla bla. The thing is that those who I worked with and did adjust their FOV to (near) correct instantly were more predictable and they also found it easier to be more consistent. But, it takes getting used to.

It's at the point where I can now easily tell when as aspiring member is racing with a far too high FOV, and their reaction to switching is pretty much always the same; A) I CANT RACE LIKE THIS!!!1111 (usually without trying for at least an hour, and usually in the demographic under 25) B) I'm far more in control of the car, more consistent and safer, finally!

Calculator: https://dinex86.github.io/FOV-Calculator/
More info on why FOV is important in simracing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VKpqxsn_R_8&pp=ygUNZm92IHNpbXJhY2luZw%3D%3D & https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AbbxkX7kS_M&pp=ygUNZm92IHNpbXJhY2luZw%3D%3D

Disclaimer: I know about the technical limitations, windshield deformations in real life and loads of other minor things. They don't really have any significant impact on the positives that you have from racing with a (near) correct FOV
 
Staff
Premium
Join the RaceDepartment Club races if you consider yourself being not fast enough or if you're not able the beat the AI. You will get help from the other drivers and that will improve your performance and gives you a lot of fun. Click on the tab CLUBS to see which events and series will be organized in the coming days.
 
Because "some people" are always the ones being taken out because the high FOV racers cannot judge distances around them correctly

I thought I heard sirens... *Glances in obnoxiously high FOV virtual mirror*

Lol all in fun. Just joking ofc.

I would counter this by saying that anyone getting into an accident repeatedly is due to inexperience overall if you havnt found a FOV that works well and are already trying to race online.

My argument was that not every single racer needs to follow a FOV calculator. It seems like "some people" want to force it on everyone for some odd reason.
 
Don't cheat!
We now know there is cheating in eSport and in other forms of Multiplayer games. The ability to improve car performance and speed is evident in the times that some of these dudes are getting in F1 20.. time trials for an example.
 
Staff
Premium
Watch the Driver 61 whiteboard tutorials.
Watch the first one and go away and practice the main points for a while - a week maybe.
Go back to the vid and refresh your memory a couple times over the course of the week.
Try to put it into practice in your normal sim racing routine.

Then move on to the next vid.
 
I could say practice before jumping online, I could recommend buying a wheel as it will help you really immerse yourself in to the whole idea of simulation and replication of reality, and not just arcading your way around with a gamepad, but I think my number 1 tip would be just have good sim etiquette. Meaning when you play online with others, adhere to the flags, to basic rules like not immediately jumping back on track when you crash or spin out out of ego, when you know there are cars coming up behind you, etc.

basically treat a simulator like you are in a real life car. That's where the joy of playing a sim comes from, that you replicate reality and do good while driving realistically.
 

Latest News

Article information

Author
Angus Martin
Article read time
2 min read
Views
7,301
Comments
91
Last update

What would make you race in our Club events

  • Special events

    Votes: 52 27.5%
  • More leagues

    Votes: 33 17.5%
  • Prizes

    Votes: 37 19.6%
  • Trophies

    Votes: 21 11.1%
  • Forum trophies

    Votes: 11 5.8%
  • Livestreams

    Votes: 28 14.8%
  • Easier access

    Votes: 104 55.0%
  • Other? post your reason

    Votes: 30 15.9%
Back
Top