What's one tip you would give fellow simracers?

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More and more racing fans become simracers everyday. But our community is a complex one that can leave newcomers like a bunny in the headlights. What is one tip you would give fellow simracers?

Image credit: Kunos Simulazioni

The simracing community is certainly a growing one. Less so than in the height of the pandemic, but more and more racing fans are still making their way to the hobby of pretending to drive.

Such growth means many newcomers are entering the hobby with little to no experience. A long list of games one can try out, countless pieces of hardware and many accessories one can buy and an online community that can arguably appear somewhat toxic. Simracing is most definitely not the easiest of hobbies to get in to.

That's what this little piece is all about. It's time to put down the pitchforks, settle the debates and throw on an aura of positivity. Surely we all know someone that's attempting to get in to simracing and we'd all want them to have a good first experience of the hobby. So what would be one tip you would give your fellow simracer?

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This doesn't have to focus on newbies. In fact, judging by iRacing voice chats and countless Discord server rants, it seems many a simracer would love to provide other experienced enthusiasts with their advice. Although these rants often turn out to be attacks rather than constructive.

Advice from a writer​

As usual with this type of discussion, I will leave my take on the matter here.

As a simracer that has often enjoyed online competition, I am starting to lose motivation for competitive online services. This is mostly due to a concern when it comes to the safety ratings they offer.

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Before entering a race, I frequently worry that a fellow racer will take me out, handing me half a dozen incident points. On the other hand, I fear I could ruin other racers' fun by causing incidents myself. Wanting for everyone to have a good time, this can often be a burden on one's mind when racing.

But if you see the bigger picture, you shouldn't have to worry about incident points or ratings. Be it online, in leagues or offline. Race because it's what you want to do rather than to chase rating points. Certainly don't stop yourself from participating or having fun in fear of losing safety rating. It can always be recovered in later races. Stop focusing on the numbers when racing.

What advice would you give your fellow simracers?
About author
Angus Martin
Motorsport gets my blood pumping more than anything else. Be it physical or virtual, I'm down to bang doors.

Comments

Understand that you need more than only one tip to become a good racedriver.
 
I'm a newbie. Maybe a rookie now after 6 months. I was so bad when I started.
My advice:
Stick at it. Everyone thinks they know how to drive. You don't. You have to learn it. It can be disheartening to be last in every race but someone has to be.

Finish the race. Learn. Watch others. You will maybe take a corner well or badly. Try and learn from it. If you finish, you will rarely be last - people drop out, crash, get fed up, go for their tea etc. Great satisfaction can be had from finishing a tough event.

Try to race cleanly. Be a gentleman, If in doubt, lift and back off. People will thank you and welcome you to their events if you race cleanly, even if you're a terrible driver. After all, every event needs competitors.

Find a decent club on Discord. Turn up regularly to race. Chat, post your experiences, have a laugh, ask for advice. You'll be very welcome. Be polite, Be nice. No-one likes an abusive dickhead. (it;s a game, you didn't cause anyone to spend thousands of pounds). That said it is a serious game and respect the fact that many spend hours practicing and don;t want to be crashed out or delayed in their quest for glory.

Practice offline, find track guides, watch the AI (cockpit). Race 30 min races with the AI. Find an AI strength that you can keep up with and just drive with them, Turn up the AI strength as you are ready.
I'm still not good but am massively improved.

If you're lapped, do the decent thing. Get out of the way. Stick to one side of the track and stay there, Slow down if you need to. If you're being lapped, its just rude to try and battle the leader.
There are some idiots in this world, you will meet some. It's inevitable. Ignore them. Everyone has crashed or ruined someone's race due to inexperience. Be honest, apologise and keep going.

If you get dropped, keep going. You made the effort to turn up, so see out the race. I know its not fun to drive around on your own but try to learn from it and do better next time. Maybe practice more, learn the track better etc. Someone may crash, spin out, blow an engine, yellow flag etc. If you give up because you are running last, this sport isn't for you. Positive mindset.

As someone said earlier, don't worry about set-ups. Just learn to drive the basic car smoothly and consistently. Also, don't obsess over expensive gear. All in good time. I'm sure a super Fanatec system would feel much nicer than my G29 but would it make me faster? Probably not.

Learn how to read the track, the corners, the apexes. Easier said than done but do your homework. A few laps in the cockpit of the AI car can teach all sorts - listen to the engine, the gear changes, watch the turn points, the braking points. It is really interesting.
Above all - keep going and enjoy it.
 
Club Staff
Premium
I'm a newbie. Maybe a rookie now after 6 months. I was so bad when I started.
My advice:
Stick at it. Everyone thinks they know how to drive. You don't. You have to learn it. It can be disheartening to be last in every race but someone has to be.

Finish the race. Learn. Watch others. You will maybe take a corner well or badly. Try and learn from it. If you finish, you will rarely be last - people drop out, crash, get fed up, go for their tea etc. Great satisfaction can be had from finishing a tough event.

Try to race cleanly. Be a gentleman, If in doubt, lift and back off. People will thank you and welcome you to their events if you race cleanly, even if you're a terrible driver. After all, every event needs competitors.

Find a decent club on Discord. Turn up regularly to race. Chat, post your experiences, have a laugh, ask for advice. You'll be very welcome. Be polite, Be nice. No-one likes an abusive dickhead. (it;s a game, you didn't cause anyone to spend thousands of pounds). That said it is a serious game and respect the fact that many spend hours practicing and don;t want to be crashed out or delayed in their quest for glory.

Practice offline, find track guides, watch the AI (cockpit). Race 30 min races with the AI. Find an AI strength that you can keep up with and just drive with them, Turn up the AI strength as you are ready.
I'm still not good but am massively improved.

If you're lapped, do the decent thing. Get out of the way. Stick to one side of the track and stay there, Slow down if you need to. If you're being lapped, its just rude to try and battle the leader.
There are some idiots in this world, you will meet some. It's inevitable. Ignore them. Everyone has crashed or ruined someone's race due to inexperience. Be honest, apologise and keep going.

If you get dropped, keep going. You made the effort to turn up, so see out the race. I know its not fun to drive around on your own but try to learn from it and do better next time. Maybe practice more, learn the track better etc. Someone may crash, spin out, blow an engine, yellow flag etc. If you give up because you are running last, this sport isn't for you. Positive mindset.

As someone said earlier, don't worry about set-ups. Just learn to drive the basic car smoothly and consistently. Also, don't obsess over expensive gear. All in good time. I'm sure a super Fanatec system would feel much nicer than my G29 but would it make me faster? Probably not.

Learn how to read the track, the corners, the apexes. Easier said than done but do your homework. A few laps in the cockpit of the AI car can teach all sorts - listen to the engine, the gear changes, watch the turn points, the braking points. It is really interesting.
Above all - keep going and enjoy it.
Solid advice right there. Well said on every point. Coming from another noob-transitioning-to-rookie I can relate and agree. Especially true about just finishing the race. Don't quit, in most races there will be attrition and you will find yourself moving up the grid. Like others have told me, work on consistency and the speed will come. I'm still working on the consistency...;)
 
I'm a newbie. Maybe a rookie now after 6 months. I was so bad when I started.
My advice:
Stick at it. Everyone thinks they know how to drive. You don't. You have to learn it. It can be disheartening to be last in every race but someone has to be.

Finish the race. Learn. Watch others. You will maybe take a corner well or badly. Try and learn from it. If you finish, you will rarely be last - people drop out, crash, get fed up, go for their tea etc. Great satisfaction can be had from finishing a tough event.

Try to race cleanly. Be a gentleman, If in doubt, lift and back off. People will thank you and welcome you to their events if you race cleanly, even if you're a terrible driver. After all, every event needs competitors.

Find a decent club on Discord. Turn up regularly to race. Chat, post your experiences, have a laugh, ask for advice. You'll be very welcome. Be polite, Be nice. No-one likes an abusive dickhead. (it;s a game, you didn't cause anyone to spend thousands of pounds). That said it is a serious game and respect the fact that many spend hours practicing and don;t want to be crashed out or delayed in their quest for glory.

Practice offline, find track guides, watch the AI (cockpit). Race 30 min races with the AI. Find an AI strength that you can keep up with and just drive with them, Turn up the AI strength as you are ready.
I'm still not good but am massively improved.

If you're lapped, do the decent thing. Get out of the way. Stick to one side of the track and stay there, Slow down if you need to. If you're being lapped, its just rude to try and battle the leader.
There are some idiots in this world, you will meet some. It's inevitable. Ignore them. Everyone has crashed or ruined someone's race due to inexperience. Be honest, apologise and keep going.

If you get dropped, keep going. You made the effort to turn up, so see out the race. I know its not fun to drive around on your own but try to learn from it and do better next time. Maybe practice more, learn the track better etc. Someone may crash, spin out, blow an engine, yellow flag etc. If you give up because you are running last, this sport isn't for you. Positive mindset.

As someone said earlier, don't worry about set-ups. Just learn to drive the basic car smoothly and consistently. Also, don't obsess over expensive gear. All in good time. I'm sure a super Fanatec system would feel much nicer than my G29 but would it make me faster? Probably not.

Learn how to read the track, the corners, the apexes. Easier said than done but do your homework. A few laps in the cockpit of the AI car can teach all sorts - listen to the engine, the gear changes, watch the turn points, the braking points. It is really interesting.
Above all - keep going and enjoy it.
What I think is really important, and I forgot it in my previous advice, is to train your brain, as a muscle, to understand and learn tracks. When I started sim racing, I used to stick to a few tracks, easy to learn, with distinct landmarks and turns. That was a bad idea. The more tracks you practice on, the faster your brain learn them and manage to preview the flow of the turns and manage to find the apexes. And you will improve even on the tracks you sticked with and thought you mastered.

You generally see the result of not doing this exercice in public multiplayer, where 2 or 3 tracks are mainly played in all games (spa, monza and a1 ring for example).

Edit : that's where Assetto Corsa and AMS2 are really useful, with many unusual tracks (rfactor 2's modded tracks are often well known tracks), which make you learn many new tracks you never seen before. Raceroom as some unusual tracks too (the nothern european ones, but more adapted to slower cars). These 2 sims are good learning tools in that aspect (for sure AMS1, modded gtr2 and rfactor... are good ones too).
 
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