GRR

The seven best sim racing games – FOS Future Lab

31st March 2020
Goodwood Road & Racing

While the rest of the racing world temporarily shuts down and postpones, including sadly our own Members’ Meeting and Festival of Speed presented by Mastercard, or in some cases even cancels events, there is a glimmer of hope in the virtual world.

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Previously seen as a nerdy pastime for those who can’t race ‘proper’ cars, sim racing has had a massive boost over the last few weeks as real-world drivers turn to their PCs to scratch that motorsport itch. As a result, officially-sanctioned series from Formula 1, IndyCar, NASCAR and Australian Supercars have cropped up, with most featuring at least a handful of their respective 2020 grids.

This is the perfect time, then, to break out that old Logitech and strap yourself in for hours upon hours of hotlapping and online racing. So, in an ever-growing market, what do you focus on? Let GRR take you on a quick crash course of what we’re playing while stuck at home. Here are our seven best sim racing games.

iRacing

Let's start with the big one. While many may be turned off by the cost factor (a monthly subscription is required to play the game), it’s safe to say that this is the choice of the pro sim racer.

The untrained eye may think that a 12-year-old game can’t hack it compared to its more youthful competitors, but they could not be further from the truth. Constant updates keep iRacing relevant and arguably has the best community of online racers going, thanks to its strict policies against reckless drivers. The majority of the eSeries cropping up to replace real-life motorsport this year are on the iRacing platform, the likes of Max Verstappen, Neel Jani, Juan Pablo Montoya and Antonio Felix da Costa, proving iRacing’s popularity.

NASCAR have stepped up the eSports game with FOX running full TV coverage for their iRacing races, which included the full pomp and ceremony of a normal NASCAR race, but in virtual form and even the return of retired legend Dale Earnhardt, Jr. IndyCar and Supercars series are due to start with a similar assortment of pro-drivers. Thus proves a key plus to iRacing – where else can you genuinely put yourself alongside Grand Prix winners and Le Mans champions in similar machinery and see how good you really are? That alone is worth the subscription price.

Project Cars 2

While there are plenty of sims out there for the PC gamer, the console user can often feel a little left out. While both of the big players have their own exclusive racing sims – Gran Turismo on the PS4 and Forza Motorsport on the Xbox One – neither feel quite the full rounded sim (although if we had to choose one at Goodwood HQ, it’d have to be Gran Turismo purely on the basis that we can race around our office…). When Slightly Mad Studios released the first Project Cars in 2015, it offered console gamers a taste of proper sim racing. The sequel provides even more for the player, and gives a wide range of options – want to race IndyCars at the Brickyard? Done. Ice racing? Yep. Porsche 917s down the old Mulsanne Straight? You bet (after buying the DLC). Many an hour can be lost just pushing the hot lap game as you strive for that extra tenth of a second around Spa-Francorchamps in the Toyota TS050 Hybrid.

rFactor 2

The original rFactor was a goldmine for the modding community, meaning that even though it was a 2005 game, it was still hugely popular by the time of its sequel’s release in 2013. The varied nature of what you could find was incredibly broad, this writer remembers losing a day competing in Brisca F2 stockcars at Belle Vue thanks to a mod he found one rainy evening. Thankfully, the swathes of user-generated content have continued in rFactor 2, to the extent that you could pretty much pick a year of Formula 1 history and before you know it you’re playing as Ayrton Senna taking on Alain Prost at Suzuka. Just make sure that you have plenty of disk space available and that your internet is up to large downloads, as you’ll probably find yourself like a kid in a sweet shop once you start searching through the mod sites…

Automobilista

This may be a slightly unknown name to many, caused in no small part to the fact the game is produced by the lesser-known Reiza Studios, who had previously produced Stock Car Extreme, a game focussed on the Brazilian Stock Car V8 series. What it might lack in marketing ability, Automobilista completely makes up for it in the gameplay, widely regarded as one of the out and out best sims out there. Hugely popular YouTuber Jimmy Broadbent has been known to sing the praises of Automobilista, so if it’s good enough for Jimmer, it must be good enough for us.

F1 2019

I can almost hear the cries of “that’s not a proper sim” as I type this sentence, but this is, if anything, one of the most important games on this list. There are a lot of motorsport fans who solely watch Formula 1, and many of those fans would love the opportunity to line up alongside Lewis Hamilton, Sebastian Vettel and the rest of the grid. This is what you could call a gateway game. Having played for a few seasons on a gamepad, the curiosity will cause the regular to go out and buy a wheel and pedals, and that’s where it all starts…

Dirt Rally 2

The Dirt series has long been the go-to for rally and off-road racing fans, but it has always felt a little arcadey for the ardent sim fan. That was until Codemasters brought out Dirt Rally in 2015, and it brought with it a level of realism that hadn’t been seen in a rally game since Richard Burns Rally in the early 2000s.

Such was the popularity of Dirt Rally that a sequel was released early last year, and once again saw an emphasis put on the realism. Such is the realism that it’s incredibly difficult to get through a stage in one piece – at least it is for someone with the talent (or lack thereof) of this writer. That said, while the game provides an extreme challenge, the sense of achievement at the finish line is something few other games manage to achieve.

Grand Prix World

21 years ago MicroProse released Grand Prix World, the third and most polished game in the Grand Prix Manager series. Here was a game that gave us the chance to join in with the Football Manager (or Championship Manager as it was known back then) brigade and pretend we were Ron Dennis or Eddie Jordan. Not only controlling the race tactics, but everything behind the scenes from merchandise sales to hospitality units, even to whether you want to develop active suspension at risk of protest from your rivals. Hilarity often ensued with some of the AI decisions – one year in this writer’s game with Jordan, Minardi suddenly found itself with works Ferrari engines. Unfortunately the chances of playing GPW during this lockdown is slim as the game struggles on modern operating systems, but if there’s ever a time to find work arounds to play the games you’ve missed from the past 20, it’s now.

Welcome to FOS Future Lab where we report on the latest visions of future technology. We'll be boldly covering flying cars, hoverboards, jetpacks and spaceships with plenty of down to earth topics in between.

  • Gaming

  • Esports

  • Formula 1

  • IndyCar

  • NASCAR

  • GranTurismo

  • Forza

  • iRacing

  • Project Cars

  • Dirt Rally

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