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  • BRISTOL, TENNESSEE - APRIL 05: (EDITORIAL USE ONLY) (Editors note: This image was computer generated in-game) Kyle Larson, driver of the #42 McDonald's McDelivery Chevrolet, races at Bristol Motor Speedway on April 05, 2020 in Bristol, Tennessee. (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images)

    NASCAR driver fired after using a racial slur while streaming

    by 
    Richard Lawler
    Richard Lawler
    04.15.2020

    A NASCAR driver lost his real-life racing job after using a racial slur during a live-streamed iRacing event on Sunday.

  • NASCAR

    NASCAR driver 'rage quits' esports race

    by 
    Richard Lawler
    Richard Lawler
    04.06.2020

    With real-life race events canceled, drivers have taken their talents to esports and unsurprisingly, the usual conflicts have followed. A video game.

  • Porsche

    Porsche's virtual race series starts tomorrow with pro drivers at the wheel

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    04.03.2020

    It's not just multi-manufacturer racing leagues like NASCAR going digital during the COVID-19 pandemic. Porsche is livestreaming its Mobil 1 Supercup Virtual Edition starting on April 4th at 10AM Eastern, when drivers take to a digital version of the Spanish Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya for two races in 911 GT3 Cup cars. The iRacing-based series will have 31 drivers, 22 of which are full-time Supercup racers -- the nine others are factory and young professional drivers fielded by big-name sponsors like TAG Heuer and Vodafone.

  • Chris Graythen/Getty Images

    NASCAR's virtual race was the most-watched esports TV show to date

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    03.25.2020

    NASCAR and Fox Sports might have started airing virtual races out of pandemic-induced necessity, but it appears their efforts paid off. Fox has revealed that the inaugural eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series race on March 22nd drew 903,000 viewers on FS1, making it the highest-rated esports TV program to date. It was also the most-watched broadcast on FS1 since mass sports event cancellations on March 12th and the most-watched sports broadcast on cable that Sunday, although those last two feats weren't too difficult given the dearth of live sports.

  • AP Photo/Terry Renna

    NASCAR is replacing canceled races with esports featuring pro drivers

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    03.19.2020

    Sports leagues and broadcasters are scrambling to fill the void now that many live competitions are cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and for NASCAR and Fox Sports that means venturing into relatively uncharted territory. They've announced an inaugural eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series that will replace canceled NASCAR races with "simulation-style" esports competitions. These will involve top-tier competitors, too -- you can expect Dale Earnhardt Jr., Bobby Labonte, Kyle Busch and Denny Hamlin among other racers and luminaries from various NASCAR series.

  • McLaren

    McLaren's expanded eSports program includes mobile racing games

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    07.07.2018

    McLaren is enamored with eSports -- so much so that it's expanding the scope of its program. The 2018 edition of the Shadow Project promises to be more "open and inclusive" than you might expect, letting you compete for virtual motorsports glory not just with die-hard PC racing simulators like iRacing and rFactor 2, but more forgiving experiences like Forza Motorsport on the Xbox One and even a mobile game, Real Racing 3. It may seem counterintuitive for a performance car brand to accept competitors who may only ever play casual titles, but there's reasoning here -- it's not about the games so much as the intellect involved in playing them.

  • iRacing is the real driving simulator

    by 
    Jef Reahard
    Jef Reahard
    02.16.2014

    I've never been to northern California's legendary Laguna Seca road course. In meatspace, at any rate. But thanks to dozens of realistic racing game recreations, I know the track's serpentine layout and its infamous corkscrew corner like the back of my hand. I've barreled through it hundreds if not thousands of times since 1999's Gran Turismo 2, so it darn well ought to be familiar by now, right? And it was, right up until I loaded onto iRacing's version of it.

  • World's biggest HD screen? Let's play a game on it

    by 
    Alexander Sliwinski
    Alexander Sliwinski
    05.12.2011

    What's the first thing you do after installing the world's largest HD screen, a 16,000-square-foot ocular wonder? Play video games on it! The Charlotte Motor Speedway recently celebrated the installation of a big ol' Panasonic TV by inviting NASCAR driver Dale Earnhardt Jr. to take a couple of virtual laps on the thing in iRacing (not our first choice, but an apt one, we suppose). The project took 57 workers four months to construct -- totaling more than 11,000 man hours. The structure weighs 332.5 tons and features 158 panels illuminated by 9,000,000 LED lamps. This ginormous 720p display will be pretty much wasted on track replays, standings and stats. So tragic.

  • Charlotte Motor Speedway, Panasonic flip the switch on the world's largest HD screen (video)

    by 
    Richard Lawler
    Richard Lawler
    05.11.2011

    Charlotte Motor Speedway and Panasonic held an event yesterday to celebrate the completion of the new world's largest HD screen, which measures at 16,000 square feet (200 feet wide and 80 feet tall). Of course, the only natural thing to do when face with a screen this size is to play videogames on it, and CMS got very meta by bringing out NASCAR driver and simulation racing fan Dale Earnhardt Jr. to turn a few laps on the track in iRacing on the brand new display. The 720p display, located on the backstretch, is big enough for fans seated along the front stretch of the track between turn four and turn one to have a clear view of replays, standings and stats all the way across the track. Its official debut will take place May 21st during the NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race and will also take a turn as a massive HDTV airing clips of Top Gear USA during a History Channel sponsored race the week after. You can see the videogame rig, screen and ceremonial oversized remote above while video of them actually playing is available at the source link. Update: Video is also embedded after the break, via Autoblog. [Thanks, Jeffery]