Le Mans Ultimate December Update: Interlagos, Hosted Servers & 4 LMGT3 Cars Are Coming


The December update for Le Mans Ultimate is waiting for the green flag: On December 10, the new version will feature new content, hosted servers, and online championships.

Images: Studio 397

December 10 is shaping up to be a big day for updates to sim racing titles: iRacing's 2025 Season 1 is expected then, RaceRoom will deploy its Super Tourers, and finally, Le Mans Ultimate looks to add another track and the first batch of LMGT3 cars in order to continue its quest to complete the 2024 WEC grid.

It is not just content in the update, however: Hosted sessions will be possible, and online championships arrive as part of online subscriptions that have been announced previously. Here's everything you can expect in LMU's December update.

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Le Mans Ultimate LMGT3 Cars: Four New Sets Of Wheels​

As GTE has been phased out in favor of GT3 machinery at the start of the 2024 WEC season, sim racers had to make do with the full 2024 Hypercar grid racing the 2023 GTEs so far. The four new cars will change that a bit - but only three will be paid DLC, as the McLaren 720S GT3 Evo has been announced as free DLC for all players already.

The other cars that hit LMU on December 10 are the Ferrari 296 GT3, the Corvette Z06 GT3.R, and the BMW M4 GT3. By process of elimination, this leaves the Aston Martin Vantage AMR GT3 Evo, the Lamborghini Huracán GT3 EVO2, the Ford Mustang GT3, the Lexus RC F GT3 and the Porsche 911 GT3 R (992) for the final GT3 DLC cars of the 2024 season, which are expected to join the grid in early 2025.

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LMU Goes To Brazil​

The same now goes for the Losail International Circuit, which hosted the 2024 season opener, as Interlagos is confirmed to be the next track to join the Le Mans Ultimate calendar. A favorite of many, and not just Formula One fans, the iconic Brazilian circuit was the site of round 5 of the 2024 season, and it saw the #8 Toyota team around Sébastien Buemi, Brendon Hartley and Ryo Hirakawa take the overall victory while the #92 Manthey PureRxcing squad around Klaus Bachler, Alex Malkhyn and Joel Sturm won the LMGT3 class.

The Autódromo José Carlos Pace, named after the Brazilian 1970s F1 and sportscar racer, is plenty popular in sim racing, so most LMU players will most likely not be too upset about having to wait for Losail in favor of the Sao Paulo-based circuit.

The three LMGT3 cars and Interlagos will be available for £13.99 / €16.99 / $17.99.

Hosted Servers​

Content aside, the online portion of Le Mans Ultimate will look different once the December 10 update is deployed. Thus far, racing with your friends was not possible unless you happened to be in the same split for an online event, and hosting leagues was not an option at all. The arrival of hosted servers will change this, although their implementation might not be the what many sim racers might have hoped for.

For one, they will be quite accessible according to the announcement. Hosted Servers will be run via LMU's RaceControl platform, and they can be set up and controlled via the racecontrol.gg website. That should mean no dedicated server tool for players to install, and hopefully a rather easy and straight-forward way to set things up.

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On the flip side, the hosted servers will be a paid service. Depending on a server's size, they start at €0.38 per hour (potential local taxes excluded). The obvious comparison would be iRacing, which makes hosted servers available for roughly €0.48 (converted from the $0.50 price listed by iRacing) per hour, although a bulk purchase discount for these sessions is also available.

Hosted servers can be made available publicly or run as private sessions, which can be found via a five-digit code.

Spectator Mode & WEC Overlay​

Furthermore, the addition of a spectator mode coupled with WEC-style overlays means that sessions can be broadcast once the update is deployed. Streaming league races with commentary is supposed to be made easy with this.

However, even POV streams could benefit from the overlays, which are set to look like the graphics and animations used in the broadcasts of real WEC races. According to the update announcement, "the broadcast overlay outputs to HTML outside of the game and can be used as a transparent layer in most streaming tools". A guide on how to use them properly is set to follow.

Optional Online Subscriptions​

Finally, LMU's December update will also introduce online championships that will be part of a subscription model, which is set to feature two tiers. The rest of Le Mans Ultimate's online modes are not affected by this.

The lower tier is called RaceControl Pro and allows users to take part in the aforementioned online championships. Players commit to a car for the entire season to compete in, and the races will take part on set days "with a limited number of attempts per week depending upon the difficulty of the championship", according to the official announcement. RaceControl Pro is set to cost €3.50 per month if players opt for an annual subscription.

Above this sits RaceControl Pro+ at €6.50 per month on an annual subscription. This higher tier lets players unlock all Studio 397 content in both LMU and rFactor 2 in addition to what the lower-tier RaceControl Pro gets them.

More benefits are also planned to come.

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"The optional RaceControl Pro subscription includes a unique Online Championship mode that ramps up the importance and excitement of races powered by skill-based matchmaking and will in future host the the future qualifying for our important Le Mans Virtual esports series", states Motorsport Games CEO Stephen Hood. "The premium Pro+ tier of RaceControl is a landmark moment in our ambition to integrate games, features and content within a seamless platform for the benefit of our players."

Hood continues: "We sincerely hope players enjoy this update as the passionate Studio 397 team continue to pour their hard work into making this FIA WEC experience the best it can be, with many more exciting updates planned for 2025."

Other Improvements​

Meanwhile, VR will be much more accessible than before. LMU can be fired up without adding a launch option line in Steam, the UI can be customized, and VR-related keybindings will be added as well. For VR enthusiasts, this should be great news as the mode has worked so far, but not in a very streamlined way - but Studio 397 has more in mind for VR as well down the line.

Smaller tweaks concern the physics with a slight increase of grip at the limit, the implementation of ABS for the LMGT3 cars, and smaller performance improvements, particularly at the start of a race when all cars are crowded together in what is usually one of the more performance-heavy parts of any track with the main grandstands and pit building being present.

What do you make of the incoming Le Mans Ultimate update for December 10? Let us know in the comments and join the discussion in our LMU forum!
About author
Yannik Haustein
Lifelong motorsport enthusiast and sim racing aficionado, walking racing history encyclopedia.

Sim racing editor, streamer and one half of the SimRacing Buddies podcast (warning, German!).

Heel & Toe Gang 4 life :D

Comments

Premium
So Lusail will be the last new track added, just in time for the '25 season opener there. How fitting
 
Looks like a decent update. Really couldn't care for the online stuff as don't have time to race online anyway. Can't see this pack being £9.99 though with all the content that's included and weirdly they haven't announced the pricing today which they have done with the previous two dlc packs
 
This game feels half finished constanly. still badly optimised in the latest updates... a constant work in progress when you can get VRC and RSS better handling versions of Lemans cars in AC at way better frame rates with better graphics and arguably better physics.

If only there was a way to tell on Steam if a game was released early in a state of some sort of access to warn potential buyers of what they might be purchasing, maybe call it Access Early or something....
 
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Great. Already own the "Season Pass " or how it was called... Don´t care about MP (no time), or VR (motion sickness) so i just enjoy THE best physics/ffb on the market.

ONLY major thing i am waiting for is a championship mode PLEASE :devilish:

Dreammode on: If they could release the rF2 Club Porsche Cup..... i could finally send rF2 into retirement..... :rolleyes:
 
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This game feels half finished constanly. still badly optimised in the latest updates... a constant work in progress when you can get VRC and RSS better handling versions of Lemans cars in AC at way better frame rates with better graphics and arguably better physics.
Maybe you are right, AC feels like testing polygon for all cars if they are properly modeled. But all that is useless if you can't actually race against them. Wrong BOP, awfull ai, not an option to simulate endurance race, ai not pitting for tyres wear only for fuel, etc. If half of these issues AC had adressed I think no other sim should exist :) Sadly AC is good only for enjoying apart from actual racing and hot lapping. Though I don't know if the popularity of AC through LFM is high becouse I don't race online.
 
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Premium
Being as outspoken as I had been previously about this game I am turning, slowly. But I am turning from my previous comments and opinions. I have even changed it on the steam reviews to reflect that change in thought and opinion.

The fixes that have come (although slower than I'd personally like but I get it) are making headway and improvements. AMD was a big one for me personally. The future fixes that are suppose to come, make me happily interested. The level they went to for 2nd opinions on vehicles (ex. the McLaren 720 EVO) does give me some hope and happy feelings.

Seeing that the subscription won't affect me is a plus in my book also (I don't race online because real life requires me to be able to pause at any given moment, so SP only and even then I only do hotlaps or practice laps until I get bored or life requires me to pause/alt-f4).

I am still waiting on a proper TrackIR and/or better Triple Monitor support. As of right now getting my seating position correct in game to be able to see the dash or at least parts of my dash that the simhub dash doesn't/can't cover yet (check forums still missing features for proper simhub dashes the guy does update it decent'ish, if i read right still telementery issues and a few others)
 
Great. Already own the "Season Pass " or how it was called... Don´t care about MP (no time), or VR (motion sickness) so i just enjoy THE best physics/ffb on the market.

ONLY major thing i am waiting for is a championship mode PLEASE :devilish:

Dreammode on: If they could release the rF2 Club Porsche Cup..... i could finally send rF2 into retirement..... :rolleyes:
VR sickness is similar to motion sickness in kids. With a bit of practice, you can build up a tolerance and eventually, it goes away. I was a real sufferer at first, but by gradually increasing exposure, I've been able to play VR for years without any issues. I tried a triple-monitor setup with top-of-the-line equipment, but it just felt like using a joystick instead of a high-end racing wheel.
 
If only there was a way to tell on Steam if a game was released early in a state of some sort of access to warn potential buyers of what they might be purchasing, maybe call it Access Early or something....
If only there was a way to tell on Steam if a game was released early in a state of some sort of access to warn potential buyers that the greed devs won`t fix the game and are only interested in selling more dlc`s
 
But all that is useless if you can't actually race against them. Wrong BOP, awfull ai, not an option to simulate endurance race
Excellent post, thank you. I am a big fan of AC as for what I enjoy in a SIM, it offers me what I want. I do not do endurance, but still, I enjoy stint driving multi class endurance racing cars (of different period on period tracks). About an other big missing item on AC, LMU does very well, is rolling start.
As a pure WEC experience, LMU is a scalpel in a world of butcher knifes.
The latest updates makes it an even more complete offering, with hopefully more pieces of the puzzle coming in subsequent updates.
AC will stay my favorite for a foreseeable future, because of my priorities, but LMU is a worthy addition to our SIM palette, filling a gap.
 

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