How Long Have You Been Sim Racing?

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How Long Have You Been Sim Racing?


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I've been asking myself this question. There are so many sim racers here on RaceDepartment. So many different levels of experience are present. So tell us a bit about yourself and your history! How long have you been sim racing?

And to break the ice: let me start with my relatively recent story.

It all started in a dreaded year. We now look back at it in disdain as one of the worst years in recent history:

Welcome back to 2020.​

The start of the pandemic forced many people to stay inside their homes. And therefore, all outgoing people suddenly had to find something to do at home. I was not one of those, rather, I had been a gamer for years. Add to that my previous interest in racing, and you have the great combination of some games lying dormant in my Steam library.

One of those games was Project CARS 2, which I had bought at some point or another in the past, but hadn't enjoyed with my trusty gamepad. I thought of booting it up again, but then read that playing it with a wheel and pedals would be the wisest decision.

I immediately knew what to do because in the past I had read of Logitech wheels being sold 2nd hand on a local platform. However, for the first time looking at such a product, I had money to spare. So I thought to myself: "Screw it, I'm going all in and buying a new Logitech G920!"

My First Wheel Led to Massive Enjoyment​

And boy, did I have an amazing time! I ground the leaderboard of Brno with my trusty Honda NSX GT3.

Why Brno? I had been going there live for over 10 years to watch MotoGP.
Why the NSX? I just happen to like how it looks, to be honest.

This was such an exciting time for me. At some point I gathered all of my courage and started racing online. Now that was ... more of a 50/50 chance of having a good time. But the one memory that still sticks with me is my first-ever online victory!

It was Suzuka, or Sakkito as Project CARS 2 called it, GT3s and variable weather. With my trusty NSX, I qualified not too well, but after some happenings in the first lap, I was in the top 5. After some great battles, it suddenly started raining. And this is where the magic came in. I happened to choose my pit stop so wisely and perfectly that I immediately made up 2 positions. The top 2 at that time tried running their previous tyres to the end, leading to me catching up lap by lap, corner by corner. Half a lap before the end I finally managed to claw in P1 for my first ever online victory.

But then I Graduated ... To League Racing and ACC​

Fuelled by hype from this success and other good races, I started looking for beginner leagues. I found a promising one on Reddit, with which I spent quite some time before once again switching sims to RaceRoom and founding my own racing community based on that. At some point here, I had also switched to an entry-level DD wheel which I race to this day.

This community has, in the meanwhile, switched to ACC (based on community wishes), and continues to run strongly.

Think of that what you want, to this day, I mainly race on ACC and RaceRoom. And think of THIS what you want, but my favourite category to race is GT3s, no matter the sim.

So, soon I will have raced for only 3 years. Still, these 3 years have been filled with so much excitement, so many buddies I have met online, and so many good memories. I grew to love sim racing and probably won't ever look back.

Now It's Time for You to Tell Your Story!​

Sometimes it's really nice to reminisce and think about what made you the person you are now. I wholeheartedly invite you also to share your story with sim racing. How you started, how you evolved and where you are now.

Feel free to share your story as in-depth or as vague as you want. I can't wait to hear your guys' stories.

So, how long have you been sim racing? Please, let us know in the comments down below!

Ps.: Thank you very much to @AlbertGeorge for allowing me to use their magnificent screenshot for this article.
About author
Julian Strasser
Motorsports and Maker-stuff enthusiast. Part time jack-of-all-trades. Owner of tracc.eu, a sim racing-related service provider and its racing community.

Comments

My first sim was Wec Lemans i remembered spent hours and hours on this game on my Spectrum Zx128, after it came to PC, and jump onto Indy 500, Indycar Racing 1 y 2, Geoff Crammond F1, etc and a special pic from Out Run too, that i was playing on the saloon videogames. My brain is exploding remembering a lot of sims like, Rbr, Rally Trophy, Carlos Sain Rally, Sega Rally, F1 2002, Gtr1, Gtr2, Race06, Race07...buafs i´m older than i think muhahaha
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I forgot about this sim! When I got on the fire department in 1992 (paid-call) that sim was on the station computer, along with "F-15 Strike Eagle" and a fire command sim.

Myself and another firefighter would play the Indy sim and race 20 lap competitions to see who could finish better (it was single player).

We would also play the F-15 sim with the other guy as the pilot and me as the Wizzo, both of us using the keyboard to operate the sim.

Fun times...
Talk about co-incidence, I flew F-15 Strike Eagle with a Fireman and we dabbled in Microprose Grand Prix online, with 300baud modems it jumped like 20 feet and then froze, jumped, froze....lol...
We did both Front/Rear seat in the F-15, but also wingman missions. He got jumped once and I came racing over the ridge to 'help', saw the jet on his tail and fired. Took out the bad guy...except....my buddy had already reversed the enemy and I shot my own wingman down....ay yi yi...
 
I remember the days when my best mate (who was also a F1 fan) used to do 2 player hot seat racing in Microprose Grand Prix. It was fab. I would do 15 mins in my car and then the AI would take over my car and my mate would take over his car that the AI had been driving. My goodness we had some great Formula 1 races. We were always drinking while doing it too. Those were great days of early multiplayer before the internet was invented.:)
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Like many others here, I got started with Indianapolis 500 (which was very good at the time and still holds up decently today IMO), but the game that really hooked me into sim racing and motorsports was Gran Turismo, along with TOCA 2 and Forza 1. My parents gave me their PS2 and Logitech DFGT about ten years ago or so, so I played GT 3/4 for a while. Eventually I hooked up the wheel to my PC, and have been racing with PC sims ever since. I joined RD in 2017, so that must be about the time that I got serious with sim racing, and I started real-life racing in 2020, which I have wanted to do ever since playing Gran Turismo all those years ago.
 
I remember the days when my best mate (who was also a F1 fan) used to do 2 player hot seat racing in Microprose Grand Prix. It was fab. I would do 15 mins in my car and then the AI would take over my car and my mate would take over his car that the AI had been driving. My goodness we had some great Formula 1 races. We were always drinking while doing it too. Those were great days of early multiplayer before the internet was invented.:)
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Back then, games came with an owner's manual, something that I miss with current sims, when trying to configure certain in-game options.
 
INDYCAR on my Commodore 128D, getting a joystick was a significant upgrade:)
 
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Started with "Indianapolis 500:The Simulation" and "Grand Prix Unlimited". Hunched over the keyboard for steering, with the two button base of an old broken joystick on the floor using my toes for throttle and brake.
 
... today is too complicated, too professional, hardware is expensive, subscription sims.... my sim is better than yours type of community...

I mean, I´m still here, but I really miss old times.
Expensive does not begin to cover it.

Let us look back, 25 years ago a top line joystick (three axis, hat switch, a dozen programmable buttons) was over $200 and required 100meg of custom software and drivers to function. Twenty years later $35 got you a joystick that did everything that old one did and more, without a need for any extra software.
Twenty five years ago an average wheel/pedal unit, no FFB, was around $100; twenty years later a cheap, no FFB wheel is nearly $200, and anything considered "serious" cost a month's mortgage. I was recently reading a game site's recommendations/comparisons of new wheels. Their favorite overall was a $400 Thrustmaster, their recommendation for a "budget" wheel (budget, mind you) was a $350 unit; their recommendation for a beginner who didn't want to pay that much was the aforementioned no FFB unit at almost $200.

Now what happened to increased production and improved technology reducing prices, as it did with joysticks? I've no issue with those who wish to build a $3000+ replica cockpit with custom electronics, direct drive wheel, etc.; have fun. But there is no true budget market in race sims any more, and I think the manufacturers are pricing themselves out of hte market. Especially when quality control seems a thing of the past; I see many of these expensive wheels available used, usually with a litany of repairs and mods needed, yet still selling for $250+ (which makes me quite leery of the ones on ebay for less than $100).

To be analogous, imagine you went to buy a new car and had a choice of $400k exotics or $15k econoboxes, with nothing in between.
 
Much the same as 30+ crowd except never had any interest for consoles.

Indy 500 had me :coffee: brought joystick, 256k video EGA monitor, sound blaster 8bit, headphones, Dos5.0/6.0

586 and NFS had me buy Qemm memory manager which allowed you to run the SE edition in 8mb of memory ( stated requirement 16mb)
8mb memory then cost $60 per mb and no discount buying bulk so to run SE was extra $480 where as Qemm cost $90AU :x3:
 
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Premium
20 years ago it took me all week to earn what I get in a day now...
 
Oh I remember that...I went from flying Jetfighter III...to this...14 years old, I wasn't ready...come to think of it, neither was my PC :roflmao:

Back on topic, it's a hard question to answer, depends on what you call "sim racing":

(dates are when I played them, not when it was released)
  • First racing game I ever saw: Accolade's Test Drive, PC, 1990? Watched my much-older godbrother play it, I was around 5 years old.
  • First racing game I ever played: RC Pro-AM on NES, also 1990.
  • First racing game using a wheel: Virtua Racing at my local arcade, 1992
  • First multiplayer racing game: Super Mario Kart, SNES, 1992
  • First racing game loosely based on IRL series: Super Monaco GP, Genesis, 1994
  • First racing game with real cars: The Need For Speed, Saturn, 1997
  • First racing game with licensed series, cars and tracks: F1 World Grand Prix, N64, 1998
  • First game most would call a sim for its time: Gran Turismo, PSX, 1999
  • First console game driven with a wheel: Gran Turismo 5 with a Logitech G27, PS3, 2011
  • First PC sim with a wheel: Project CARS (1), 2015
  • First PC sim addiction (at least 500 hrs): Automobilista (1), 2016
  • Current racing addiction: iRacing, started 2017, started seriously around 2019.
 
I remember the days when my best mate (who was also a F1 fan) used to do 2 player hot seat racing in Microprose Grand Prix. It was fab. I would do 15 mins in my car and then the AI would take over my car and my mate would take over his car that the AI had been driving. My goodness we had some great Formula 1 races. We were always drinking while doing it too. Those were great days of early multiplayer before the internet was invented.:)
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That's true offline multiplayer! Refilling between your driving sessions! Just a big glass of wine.... a mega pint???
 

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I'm surprised how old we mostly are. All the young'ns are probably on Discord...
Well, the youngest ones have less stories to tell, as they mostly have started simracing with current games which are already quiet old (AC, rfactor2, raceroom, ams1, dirt rally, Gt7...). Some of them may have discovered older sims though, although I understand the old graphics can put them away.

Well, let the old ones tell their stories then, reminding their ugly old titles, their FFB joysticks and their big manuals (GP2 has a nice one, with driving techniques, amazing, still got it).
 
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