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

Leaving the money aspect aside I still don't see how this could work.

You go from playing F1 directly to driving F1 ? Not going to happen in my opinion. I don't think one can step into F1 without going through the developement of driving at least F3 and F2. That person also has to be rather young. Any teams looking at the sim racing pool would not know about the driver they are looking at. They might find someone who is an ace on the sim but is already in his 30s. There are too many variables. Health and fitness plays a huge part. Sitting for two hours in front of your screen is a massive difference to sitting two hours in a race car, F1 or else.

And let's be honest, there are millions upon millions auf sim racers world wide. And how many in the last couple of years have become real world racers ? A dozen ? That's a microscopic sample.
The only catch is the FIA don't give super licence points for miles driven in sims.
 
Not F1 but I can see alot of senior/master age-classed motorsports benefiting alot from this circles talent pool
 
D
If you use pictures like that in articles like this.. I don't think so. :D
 
Not unless motorsport changes drastically in how it works. It's all a money game, not a merit game.
Exactly. Someone who happens to sim race may well make it to the "major leagues", but I suspect the reason they get there will be real-world experience and parental/sponsorship dollars. So is that a story (as we see in the media more and more now) that a "sim racer" made it (by implication, because of their sim racing) to success in high-level motorsport like F1? Personally, I don't think so.

Suppose you're a skilled young sim racer who gets a real-world opportunity by winning that recent RaceRoom F4 seat competition: most likely you'll have to pay loads of money to actually get the F4 seat. But even if RaceRoom paid for that (which I doubt they did), any future seasons and next steps up the ladder will be a function of $$$$ you bring NOT your racing ability or past sim racing success. In that way, I think those competitions are really disingenuous, putting ideas in kids' heads that are patently unrealistic – IMO, they're really just for marketing and putting a veneer on what, ultimately, are video games.

I can see sim games helping with track knowledge and some elementary driving techniques (turning with throttle/brake, heel-toe, some basic racecraft). It must be helpful! The racing in sim racing is real. But from everything I've seen and heard – including from people like Jimmy Broadbent – there's still a gulf between real-life and sim. And why wouldn't there be, if we're honest? The cars in sim racing aren't – be it the precise way they handle, all the mechanical aspects, or the lack of g-forces and fear.

One thing I am curious about when reading the article is the countless examples. Especially if you limit those to people who have started sim racing at a young age, became really good at it, and then made the jump to real racing without ever doing any karting or other real life motorsport.
I was thinking the same thing exactly! Can anyone list "countless" examples of sim racers getting opportunities in motorsport because of their sim racing without prior real-world experience and eventually reaching a high level of motorsport competition? Personally, I can't.

I think you will more commonly find a scenario where someone started karting at a young age, became really good at that, ran out of money, then went into sim racing and then made the jump back into a real car again. Happy to be proven wrong btw!
I have actually seen other people suggesting that this is (largely) true as well. For instance, I believe both Jann Mardenborough and James Baldwin had experience in real-world motorsport (I think karts, if not Formula Ford) before "running out of money" and turning to sim racing.

Maybe the most plausible example of "sim racer" success is the story of NASCAR driver William Byron. The story is that he discovered his passion for racing through watching NASCAR then doing some iRacing as a kid. Then he got a ride in a Legends car in 2012 or 2013 (presumably bought by his family) and he quickly learned, proved his skills there, and advanced. But again... is the key thing to emphasize that he happened to do some sim racing and wasn't bad at it? Or that he could pay his way into real-world experiences then developed his real-world skills quickly and proved his mettle? These sim racing media stories often suggest people like Byron learned everything they learned about racing from sim racing... which seems very misrepresentative of the truth and makes me skeptical of "sim to reality" stories in general.
 
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I have the potential of being a great boxer if I'm good at a boxing simulator that uses somewhat simplified motion controls.
 
Yet another article on this site that tries to portray sim racing as real racing… It’s not. Let’s get back to Earth: I don’t think that there’s a team boss that looks at iRacing for their next driver.

Becoming a F1 driver is now a full-time job that starts when you’re 14 years old. And you have to drive real race cars and start lining up sponsors immediately. Sim racing can be a nice hobby, unless of course we’re talking about a pro simulator at the team’s headquarters.

But to become a F1 driver, you need to drive real cars.
 
Will an F1 driver come from sim racing?
That's a huge maybe and with the growing number of boy's or girls jumping in to their parents sim rigs from an early age, they do have a start\advantage that many would not.
The biggest down side to simulators without spending 100K+ and still there is a downside, is the physicality and GeForces. That's something that current technology can not simulate.
Going from karts and the lower formula's is a gradual learning curve, it builds the fitness and understanding and feeling of the forces on the body.
Spending hours in a sim rig at home, really does not even compare to say 60 minutes karting. The home driver may have the driving talent, but do they have the level of physical fitness, and the mental capacity to suddenly be on the worlds F1 stage with out freaking out???
 
One thing I am curious about when reading the article is the countless examples. Especially if you limit those to people who have started sim racing at a young age, became really good at it, and then made the jump to real racing without ever doing any karting or other real life motorsport. I think you will more commonly find a scenario where someone started karting at a young age, became really good at that, ran out of money, then went into sim racing and then made the jump back into a real car again. Happy to be proven wrong btw!
This is exactly the Igor Fraga story. Young champ in Japan and Brazil, ran out of money, then won the Gran Turismo FIA Championship and got a drive in the New Zealand Toyota championship, won that (beating Liam Lawson). That got him an F3 drive with crap team Charouz, he was way faster than Schumacher but the car kept breaking down. Ended in a dispute where he had to miss the last race. Didn't have money to switch teams so he's back to Gran Turismo. Meanwhile Liam Lawson is getting closer to F1. It's a cruel sport.
 
No. To get to F1 you need money, money, money, money, talent and money. Anyone with the means to will already be karting and those that are karting to the highest level and have money to sustain that will end up in F1.
 
I went bankrupt in 2008 and went trough divorce in 2009... and that was only because of amateur Group N Rally based on a 2007 Skoda Fabia.

Any form of Motorsport is expensive, much to expensive even at thatmentioned amateur level.
If someone asked me about "goals in the season" my aswer would be something alogn the lines of: "trying not to break something". in Amateur Motor sports the second broken clutch in a season will end your season.

It is impossible to earn money with motorsports until you somehow get into a high level.
Even big manufacturers right now pull out if it because of the cost with no return.
 
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Premium
The current F1 stars are already simracers. Max Verstappen raced in iRacing before he had even touched an open-wheeler (and races under his dad's name since he's the one that paid for it :p )
 
As others already pointed it out, Max already is a hardcore simracer. Some others also fool around or take it somewhat seriously (Lando) but no one of them is actually on top/alien level in simracing except Max (who takes it super serial).
I think that what could be a common trajectory for young racing drivers - read this about Cem - F1 Esports graduate Cem Bolukbasi secures Formula 2 drive for 2022
I'm really happy for him, known/supported the guy from iRacing since years ago when thing like F2 level seemed like a pipe dream and even F3 costs were a no go at the time.
BTW maybe RD could do an interview with Cem?
 
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Closest we may actually see is someone like Rudy Van Buren who won the first World's Fastest Gamer and got official Mclaren simulator duties. Later came Porsche Carrera Cup races.
 

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