iRacing members can now partake in a survey where they can express their qualms with the service - and also request what cars and tracks they want to see added in the future.
If you are a member of iRacing, you can perhaps help influence the direction that the sim is going - similar to how players could recently have their say regarding EA Sports WRC. All you have to do is open up the survey that you may find in your inbox, or alternatively by clicking here.
The survey takes very little time, and it will ask you about what type of cars and series you prefer to race and what is important to you when choosing how to spend your time on the sim.
In order, the questions included are:
This is your chance to give feedback to iRacing as to which content you want added in the future! Image: iRacing.com
One noteworthy takeaway from the questions is the addition of a Racing School. Many like to think that iRacing is home to already seasoned racers who know everything about racecraft, but the truth is that most iRacers have encountered a GTP driver who has no traffic management skills.
There is also many an F4 driver who just divebombs at every corner, or an oval racer who does not know how to stick to their line. So the addition of tutorials for all rookie drivers to partake in would be a very welcome addition. Perhaps locking certain series behind particular tutorials to incentivise better driving?
Of course, there are also other issues with iRacing that the community are eager to express. Whether they can be raised in the survey or not, iRacing are definitely trying get feedback from the community.
What do you plan on communicating to iRacing via their survey? Let us know on Twitter @OverTake_gg or in the comments down below.
If you are a member of iRacing, you can perhaps help influence the direction that the sim is going - similar to how players could recently have their say regarding EA Sports WRC. All you have to do is open up the survey that you may find in your inbox, or alternatively by clicking here.
The survey takes very little time, and it will ask you about what type of cars and series you prefer to race and what is important to you when choosing how to spend your time on the sim.
In order, the questions included are:
- How would you best describe your interest in sim racing/motorsport?
- How did you learn about iRacing?
- What type(s) of car(s) do you prefer to drive?
- What are your biggest frustrations with iRacing?
(Including price, progression, incident monitoring) - What would you like to see improved in iRacing?
(Including physics, frame rate, content bundles and introducing a driving school) - What do you value most about iRacing?
(Including quality of online competition system, content release frequency and licence class/ladder system) - On average, how much time do you spend playing iRacing each week?
- What limits the amount of time you spend in iRacing?
- What do you race most often?
(Including official series with either fixed or open setup, AI racing or hosted sessions/leagues) - If you participate in iRacing series, what is most important to you when choosing a race event?
(Including schedule, race length and number of other drivers in the session) - What is more important to you?
(Car, track or series structure and popularity)
This is your chance to give feedback to iRacing as to which content you want added in the future! Image: iRacing.com
One noteworthy takeaway from the questions is the addition of a Racing School. Many like to think that iRacing is home to already seasoned racers who know everything about racecraft, but the truth is that most iRacers have encountered a GTP driver who has no traffic management skills.
There is also many an F4 driver who just divebombs at every corner, or an oval racer who does not know how to stick to their line. So the addition of tutorials for all rookie drivers to partake in would be a very welcome addition. Perhaps locking certain series behind particular tutorials to incentivise better driving?
Of course, there are also other issues with iRacing that the community are eager to express. Whether they can be raised in the survey or not, iRacing are definitely trying get feedback from the community.
What do you plan on communicating to iRacing via their survey? Let us know on Twitter @OverTake_gg or in the comments down below.