Community Question: Where Is The Immersion Line Drawn?

Ferrari 499P iRacing.jpg
Image: iRacing
Many sim racers try to get as close as we can to replicating the real thing, which is all well and good. But where is that line drawn? We would like all of your input here.

Ahead of iRacing 2025 Season 1 starting up on December 17, the headline new piece of content is undoubtedly the two-time Le Mans-winning Ferrari 499P Hypercar. Plenty of iRacing players are eager to drive it, but there was some initial confusion as to where it could be raced in officials.

But following its release, another few glaring inconsistencies arose that now add to the conversation surrounding realism and immersion. With all this in mind, it is time to really ask the question about where certain players are willing to part with immersion and where it is essential for the experience.


Should The 499P Not Be In IMSA?​

Within the GTP class on iRacing prior to the new build, there were four cars: the BMW M Hybrid V8, Cadillac V-Series.R, Porsche 963 and Acura ARX-06. All of these cars race in the real-life IMSA SportsCar Championship's GTP category but also in the World Endurance Championship's Hypercar class - bar the Acura.

The 499P marks the first time that a car designed to comply with LMH regulations as opposed to LMDh has been added to the platform, but it does not race in the IMSA GTP class in real life. The upcoming Aston Martin Valkyrie LMH is set to be the first LMH to race in the North American series, and there is nothing to indicate that the 499P will be attempting a run at the likes of the Daytona 24 Hours or Sebring 12 Hours.

As a result, many people questioned as to where the 499P would be able to be raced in officials.


For those out there still not sure, the 499P will be available along with all of the other GTP class cars in their respective iRacing official series. Subsequently, it is safe to assume it will be also joining them in their corresponding Special Events such as the Daytona 24. But it seems there are some people who are still unsure at least or even angry at most that the 499P will be amongst the selection.

Sim racing does provide the capabilities to branch beyond what the real world of racing is restricted by. So when a car appears in something that is not exactly true to reality but would feasibly fit into it, would that be just as bad as a modern F1 car racing in the 24 hours of Le Mans?

The same goes for tracks. In Week 2 of the upcoming iRacing season, all corresponding IMSA series will be hosting races at Motegi. Just because the real life IMSA do not race there, is that too far removed from reality? Of course, this is all quite trivial, at least relatively to an even bigger uproar within the iRacing community right now regarding the GTP cars.

Prototypes Too Fast?​

For the new build, iRacing have been tweaking the performance of the Dallara LMP2 and all of the GTP cars, apparently to bring them more in line with how they drive in the real world. Well, they may have in fact gone the other way.

Two of the highest iRating players, Pablo Araujo and Yuri Kasdorp, both made posts pointing out the discrepancy in terms of corner speed between some of the GTP cars at certain corners and their real-life counterparts. Araujo showing the real life Ferrari 499P going through the Porsche curves at Circuit de la Sarthe going 230kph, whilst the same conditions on iRacing had the car being able to take it at 288kph.


But that is not all. Another issue with the GTP cars on iRacing is how they deploy their battery. In real life and depicted accurately in the likes of Le Mans Ultimate and Automobilista 2, the power output by the engine remains the same whether the battery is being deployed or not. In this case, the battery is there to make up the deficit in order to use less fuel across a stint.

In iRacing though, the battery deploys the same way it does in Formula One or LMP1 cars, deploying on top of the engine to create additional power. That probably explains why the cars are getting to much higher speeds in iRacing than in real life. With all this in mind, we put it to you, which areas are essential for immersion and which ones are not necessary?

What are the aspects of sim racing where you do not mind it being not completely true to life? Let us know in the comments below and join the discussion on our forums!
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RedLMR56
Biggest sim racing esports fan in the world.

Comments

Sometimes I feel racing game devs and modders are hellbent on making their content *too* realistic. Case and Point: Virtual Racing Cars' latest mods requiring a startup sequence for their cars.

Yes, people sim-race because we want to imagine following in the footsteps of are biggest idols in the motorsport world but that doesn't mean we want to go through all the nitty-gritty mundanity of all the things needed to reach that.

In the wise words of Gabe Newell, "Fun isn't realism; it's reinforcement."
I partially agree. I think it's a hobby and fun comes first. But if some people want to learn how to turn on a modern F1 and find it fun, what's the problem with a mod that does that?

The problem for me is when people want to impose their sense of realism on others.
 
Premium
Personally, I don't really care about all this tiny little detail stuff... Besides, don't we all want to see certain race cars unrestricted at some point? (Like the Porsche 919 Evo, Ferrari 499P Modificata, or McLaren 720S GT3X, or that unrestricted AMG GT3 that set a new record at Bathurst)
With you there. Would love to see that Bathurst modded GT3 in a sim
 
Premium
Of course the elephant in the room being ignored is that only a handful of drivers can attest to the accuracy, realism, and fidelity of these machines or understand how real world fidelity at tracks from one day to the next can be dramatically different. Convenient for the fizzicks elitists who often have zero track experience - even just in parade lap or truck ride to a corner station.
This what I was alluding to with my comment that my expectations are for authenticity as far as my knowledge extends.


Some people are completely unaware how much knowledge they don't have and simply cannot have, Yet seem to believe they hold expertise on things they have never experienced outside of a video game, or never studied outside of reading someone else's posts or writings.

I saw the idiot bald guy state under one of his youtube videos that he definitely knew what he was talking about as he had 10000 hours in-game experience.
 
Sometimes I feel racing game devs and modders are hellbent on making their content *too* realistic. Case and Point: Virtual Racing Cars' latest mods requiring a startup sequence for their cars.
This is a very fair argument, as are others presented in this thread, but you have to draw the line somewhere.

I'd venture to say that no car has ever or will ever go through T1 at Sebring at the 159 mph shown in the iRacing screenshot (wider entry or not), let alone LMDH/LMH which have the highest weight and lowest downforce of any prototype in the last 10 years. 120mph is already on the optimistic side for those cars. That's 75% error in lateral G (Acc=v^2/r, not exactly rocket science). Looking at some other videos, it seems 140 mph is fairly common in iRacing, which would still be an error of 35% (monumentally large).

So in essence, you're driving a car that's completely different to its real counterpart. For some, that's fine, but I think for many, it defeats the point of what a sim is supposed to be.

Not that I think public sims will be able to model these cars accurately (due to lack of data among other things), but you could make a car with 0 data and get closer than 75% error.
 
As much as I prefer a game should strives for authenticity, I appreciate the ability to put together tracks and cars that have never happened in the real world.

My immersion is ruined when cars behave in ways they wouldn't in the real world, But only as far as my knowledge extends. Its very unlikely I would notice a car having higher top speed in game in comparison to its real world counterpart, Or that battery management isn't faithfully re-created, But I can certainly see this would give someone the shits who knows these details.

As long as it looks like a car, and drives how I'd expect that car to drive, I'm good.
I agree on your first statement. I used to be obsessed with GTR2's mods, collecting cars and tracks for many series (ALMS, LMS, BPR...). I wanted the real grid an nothing more. But with time I learned to be satisfied with fictional series / cars which were good matches on tracks they didn't race on. I started to understand that with the Race 07 series. GT1, GT2's categories were fictional, and so what? They were great. The same with Raceroom. What is wrong with using real regulations for supercars that didn't make that step in the real racing world? As soon as the developpers are using these regulations, it is fine. And, at the end, you, the player, are able to understand that certain categories are better on some tracks and you do your own thing. The most important thing is that the real regulations are respected, because we want to feel the real thing and want to compare to the real pilots' performances. On this I want a real simulation of systems and speeds.
 
Realism and immersion are same thing just for some people. For me it is.

I think the line should be drawn at "no way this could be possible". And many things are possible, like Lotus 49 racing on modern semislicks, it is technically possible, and iRacing has technically done that because they are weird like that, but then they should also make it clear, and not pretend that car is on proper tires.

Same goes in this instantce. If car runs tires, aero and power which it could techincally have, but doesn't originally. It has to be stated that "in this simulation "this and that" in car is adjusted differently", so thats why it runs way faster.

Simulation is faster than real life for many reasons. But iRacing has been notoriously using way grippier tires, that also gives away more violently than they do IRL, with such tires it is very hard to drive, but possible to be very fast after lots and lots of practice.

To me driving Lotus 49 on semislicks is where I would draw the line. I would also draw the line for every instance where good physics are being degraded in some desperate attempts to be more likeable to people, and practice shows it more often give bad results. There has to be raw honesty in simulation, manly rough/gentle honesty.
 
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