Will the next F1 star be a sim racer?

sim racer.jpg
How long will it take to see a sim racer in Formula 1?

If this question was asked 10 years ago (maybe less), most people would say this would never happen. They would say it would have been the same as someone taking the leap from playing FIFA to the Premiership in the UK, or becoming a martial artist because they played Mortal Kombat.

Sim racing is different, it has evolved, hardware has improved, and real-world drivers actively take part in sim racing. The gap between real world driving and sim racing is getting smaller and perhaps one day there won’t be a gap at all.

We all know how drivers get into Formula 1. These days, being a talented driver isn’t enough - you need contacts, financial backing, sponsorships, and a lot of luck.

Currently F1 is an elitist sport and yes this is how it all started too, the pinnacle of motorsport was a place for rich playboys - but there was a brief time where drivers could make it if they had the talent. Perhaps sim racing is a window of opportunity for raw talent to make it back to F1?

It may no longer be a question; will we ever see a sim racer become an F1 driver? Maybe this is inevitable. Yes the younger generation of drivers have all taken part in sim racing actively for years, but could someone be discovered as a future star from sim racing alone?

Over recent years there have been countless examples of drivers taking the leap from driving in their bedroom, to driving a real car. Typically this happens as a result of a competition or a sim racer/content creator has become famous enough for a racing team to see an opportunity.

The potential of a sim racer in F1 could be happening right now. F1 teams could be looking at the sim racing world right now, looking for fresh talent. Sim racing is way more accessible than karting, which is typically where F1 drivers start out. Karting is expensive and requires a huge commitment from a family to finance such a hobby. Whilst it’s difficult to know how many children are karting around the world, it would be perfectly reasonable to assume that they are more children and young teens playing racing games and taking part in sim racing. Which means the pool for potential talent is far greater.

It would be safe to assume that F1 scouts have at the very least looked at a number of potential drivers. I wouldn’t be unreasonable to think that the likes of Max Verstappen may have mentioned a few names to look out for during his time in sim racing.

Even if F1 drivers who are taking part in sim racing aren’t nudging the odd scout to look at different drivers, surely these teams must see the potential. Maybe this is why they invest so heavily in their esports teams, maybe they already have names in mind, maybe they’ve been grooming the next F1 star - who’s ready and waiting in the wings to jump right in.

How long do you believe it will take for a sim racer to make it to F1?
About author
Damian Reed
PC geek, gamer, content creator, and passionate sim racer.
I live life a 1/4 mile at a time, it takes me ages to get anywhere!

Comments

Isn't this question pointless ?

Several actual young F1 drivers have shown that they are top notch sim racing drivers :

- George Russell is teaming beside Lewis for Mercedes
- Max Verstappen
- Lando Norris is driving for Mc Laren

Already three major F1 drivers who are also racing online on a regular basis, and at a very high level.

Thus the conection between the two worlds look already obvious ....
 
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Going straight from Sim to F1, no, thats not going to happen. BUT, 'starting' in sim racing and then moving to junior formulae and onto F1? That has already been done! Used to race a certain Mr Bottas on Live For Speed back before he started in Formula Renault and was just in Karts.
Also Stoffel Vandoorne was quite a regular on the sim scene around the time he was karting and in the F4 Eurocup.
Then there are those that jump straight from one to the other like Florian Strauss or Jimmy Broadbent.
I definitely think there is much more of a crossover now with the quality of the technology and the use of tech in 'real' racing makes the line between the two much more blurred than it once was.
 
The question is a bit like saying will the next great footballer be a FIFA player?If you are interested in F1 you are likley to be a racing game or sim racer.
The question needs to be:Can a sim racer go straight to F4 & win & become an F1 star?
Sim racing needs to be able to replace karting on the bottom rung of the racing ladder.For that to happen we probably need to develop the "seat of the pants"feel.So when that tech becomes good enough & cheap enough then that will open the sport to working class & middle class kids & not just the sons of millionaires.
 
Going straight from Sim to F1, no, thats not going to happen. BUT, 'starting' in sim racing and then moving to junior formulae and onto F1? That has already been done! Used to race a certain Mr Bottas on Live For Speed back before he started in Formula Renault and was just in Karts.
Also Stoffel Vandoorne was quite a regular on the sim scene around the time he was karting and in the F4 Eurocup.
Then there are those that jump straight from one to the other like Florian Strauss or Jimmy Broadbent.
I definitely think there is much more of a crossover now with the quality of the technology and the use of tech in 'real' racing makes the line between the two much more blurred than it once was.
I was suprised at the skills this guy developed on drifting sims.I guess drifting is more about balancing the throttle and angle than seat of the pants feel required for racing on track.
 
Why not? But still some refinements are needed I think.

+10 years ago I enjoyed a very young Max Verstappen hotlapping rF1 mods.
And pure simracers have made it to real racing, recent years, take just Jimmy as an example.
Lucas Ordóñez of which noone today questions his real world prototype racing capabilities started his career with a PlayStation competition.
Jann Mardenborough another example.

And being a simracer for +35 years, it's not a hobby you feel to have excuses for anymore, today I witness even girlfriends, wifes and family backing up a pro sim racer in the making. Moreover alot more female drivers have come to this business as well in real world, and the competition on top level is near pro driver experience.

This is speaking strictly the racing part - i.e. behind the wheel.

But having a good understanding of underlaying mechanisme and being DYI on your own racer is still very helpful, even though having a full garage of experts within their field.

Next level for sim racing could be focus on reward for correct and easy-to-understand feedback of the race car behaviour on track. Yes some challenge for the developers, being on the realistic track, but as I see it there's a huge movement from the arcade market of talents being bored and looking for real challenges.
 
If you started sim racing today and you still young 5-12 years old, you can, but at least you do a Karting Championship, and you have Money
 
Why not? But still some refinements are needed I think.

+10 years ago I enjoyed a very young Max Verstappen hotlapping rF1 mods.
And pure simracers have made it to real racing, recent years, take just Jimmy as an example.
Lucas Ordóñez of which noone today questions his real world prototype racing capabilities started his career with a PlayStation competition.
Jann Mardenborough another example.

And being a simracer for +35 years, it's not a hobby you feel to have excuses for anymore, today I witness even girlfriends, wifes and family backing up a pro sim racer in the making. Moreover alot more female drivers have come to this business as well in real world, and the competition on top level is near pro driver experience.

This is speaking strictly the racing part - i.e. behind the wheel.

But having a good understanding of underlaying mechanisme and being DYI on your own racer is still very helpful, even though having a full garage of experts within their field.

Next level for sim racing could be focus on reward for correct and easy-to-understand feedback of the race car behaviour on track. Yes some challenge for the developers, being on the realistic track, but as I see it there's a huge movement from the arcade market of talents being bored and looking for real challenges.
Agree with you
 
Despite what others say, video games are not real life. It may or may not teach you some valuable muscle memory. A couple of races around a proper circuit in road cars is probably more valuable in understand how cars behave than the thousand hours that I have amassed in Assetto Corsa. Once in a blue moon, I can punch above my weight and record a credible lap time in a car that more and more people don't even have the technique to drive properly anymore. That's not a hyperbole. Even in an easier car that that, I wouldn't last two laps in real life.
 
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I hope not. Ever since F1 started accepting mediocre drivers the quality of racing haw gone down.
 
What a stupid question;) the 2021 World Champion is one of the most harcore simracers....so the answer is yes but of course Max wouldnt be in F1 without his Father. I do Motorsport since Im a kid and nowadays every RacingDriver I know uses the Sim for training purposes or to race online in championships against others. They take it really seriously. The only difference between real racing and simracing is in simracing you dont have gforces(and no....Motionsimulators dont add real gforces its a fake feeling) and the other difference is you cant hurt yourself in a sim. Otherwise its basically the same. But a casual simracer make it directly to F1 is another story and that wont happen even in the future. Maybe with a lot of luck you can make it as an GT3 Racer but even than its better to already have real motorsport background. The better question should be if SimRacing adds better driving skills than doing Gokarting and in this case....SimRacing is the better tool. GoKarting gives you a good understanding how it feels to race against others but driving skills you can train better on a sim.
 
What a stupid question;) the 2021 World Champion is one of the most harcore simracers....so the answer is yes but of course Max wouldnt be in F1 without his Father. I do Motorsport since Im a kid and nowadays every RacingDriver I know uses the Sim for training purposes or to race online in championships against others. They take it really seriously. The only difference between real racing and simracing is in simracing you dont have gforces(and no....Motionsimulators dont add real gforces its a fake feeling) and the other difference is you cant hurt yourself in a sim. Otherwise its basically the same. But a casual simracer make it directly to F1 is another story and that wont happen even in the future. Maybe with a lot of luck you can make it as an GT3 Racer but even than its better to already have real motorsport background. The better question should be if SimRacing adds better driving skills than doing Gokarting and in this case....SimRacing is the better tool. GoKarting gives you a good understanding how it feels to race against others but driving skills you can train better on a sim.
Ask a stupid question and we get a stupid answer. "The only difference between real racing and simracing is in simracing you dont have gforces" :laugh:
 
I'm 48, half blind and can sit only for 30 minutes in my sim seat without stingin pain creeping up my spine and the loss of feel in my right leg. I can compete into the top 5 in 6 lap races in AMS2, ACC with "cheats" like low FFB and 320° steering angles. I can compete by using expensice Equipment that exceeds the technical sophistiction of my whole RL "weekend racer", a 2001 BMW Z3 2.8i but after such a virtuel 6 lap race, Im done for the rest of the evening.

In Sim racing I can pretend to be a 21 years old Entrepeneur but RL im on the edge to lose my Driver license due to physical impairment.

What does that say aboput Sim Racing?
It's more pretend game than close to real life experience.
It's an illusion created for distraction.

I have not come across a Simulation so far that can really replicate the feel and reality of driving the Nürburgring Nordschleife, for example. It's much easier, more natural RL compared to sim, at the same time much more scary and much more exhausting, physically and mentally.
 
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Ask a stupid question and we get a stupid answer. "The only difference between real racing and simracing is in simracing you dont have gforces" :laugh:
I see you arent able to read properly. Poor kid. If my answer seems stupid to you that only shows you have no clew. Have a nice day sweety
 
I'm 47, I'm fat, My bones are sore,I have an office job, My hands are soft, I'm a sim racer, I'm ready for F1

Stefano Domenical, lets talk, man to man.
If you recall Nigel Mansell went to America and tried to return to F1. To find he could not fit in the cockpit of the McLaren. They built a wide tub for his large frame. He could not drive the car so test driver Mark Blundell got seat with old budy Martin Brundle (Two drivers with similar names, who where often team mates)
 
Any F1 driver can be at least a very good sim racer, a very tiny percentage of very good sim racers could possibly be a f1 driver.

In sim racing you just have to care about the “technique”, there is virtually zero mental, physical and emotional pressure.
It’s like comparing throwing shots all alone at the gym at a fixed target vs throwing the game deciding shot at the last second of the Superbowl, while you are running in a full stadium, exhausted, half injured, and a couple of 120kg killers hunting you down.
I think the mental stress is there in sim racing. And some advanced rigs will do the movement and g force of a car. But a sim racer may be eratic as there is no risk to them or others. If you hit a wall at 200 mph in a sim you may get force feedback but you wont end up in hospital. Where a actual driver will.
 

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