The chequered flag has been shown for the 2023 edition of the 24 Hours of Le Mans Virtual – the grand finale to this season’s Le Mans Virtual Series. The event’s 45 entries brought together 180 elite drivers from both the real and esports worlds. Together they represented 41 different countries, and raced on the legendary French track on 164 different simulators located around the world.

At the chequered flag 37 cars successfully concluded the world’s biggest virtual endurance race, with the first 6 cars completing 356 laps of hard racing.  A total of  188,038 kilometres were covered during the 24 hours of racing and the winners today were the No.2 Team Redline of Felipe Drugovich, Felix Rosenqvist, Luke Bennett and Chris Lulham. In GTE the No.888 of Romain Grosjean’s team R8G Esports took victory, the Ferrari 488 GTE in the hands of Alexander Smolyar, Scott Andrews, Timotej Andonovski and Erjan Jajovski.

The race didn’t run entirely smoothly for many, however, with two red flag stoppages and a number of subsequent issues for individual competitors.  To explain further we asked Gérard Neveu, Executive Producer of the 24 Hours of Le Mans Virtual:

Q1:        We didn’t see any stoppages during the 24 Hours of Le Mans Virtual last year.  What happened in this 2023 edition?

“It became clear within the first 7 hours of the race that we had some serious server issues which led to us showing the red flag on the race twice.  After some initial investigation, it seems that some race competitors accidentally shared to the public the IP addresses connecting them to the server, which is not supposed to happen. This put us in a weakened position, and we were subjected to some security breaches which caused the global disconnection of all competitors.  It should never happen if the IP addresses are well protected.”

Q2:        Why were some cars given laps back for lost time, and others not?

“Within the Sporting Regulations (article 14.11) for the Le Mans Virtual Series it states that if four or more competitors suffer disconnections, Race Control will compensate any time lost by “giving back” the time in laps. This was done for the red flag stoppages and on other occasions. Where fewer than four competitors are affected by disconnections, it’s difficult to prove where the fault lies and therefore the rules state that laps are not given back.

“We obviously feel very sorry for all the affected competitors including Max Verstappen, and understand their frustrations, but we cannot change the regulations mid-race, even if it’s for a double World Champion who we fully respect, as this would be very unfair on all the other competitors.

“We have asked the rFactor2 platform to launch a full investigation to find out where these problems are coming from and of course we will look at our processes and guidelines to try and reduce chance of similar issues taking place in 2024.”

Q3:        How did the event run otherwise?

“These problems apart we think that when we look back at the 2023 edition, we can have a certain satisfaction about what we have achieved in terms of bringing together this amazing field of competitors and top teams, and with the broadcast that came live from Le Mans Virtual Series’ studio at Silverstone in the UK to TV and digital channels across the world.

“37 cars took the chequered flag and millions of viewers followed us during the weekend. The race itself was really intense and competitive delivering worthy winners and champions. You know, the 24 Hours of Le Mans always delivers drama and passionate emotions, and this is the same in the virtual version, with some competitors ending up happy and some sad.”

Q4:        And what about the Le Mans Virtual Series as a whole?

“As well as our Team Redline and R8G Esports race winners, we of course have crowned our series’ champions Porsche Coanda and BMW Team Redline.  Over the five-race season 365,038 kilometres of racing have successfully taken place and – this race apart – we have had very few issues.

“It takes a huge team effort with many, many people involved in multiple areas and we want to pay tribute to everyone for their energy, persistence, professionalism and expertise, especially in light of the technical problems we had.  Specifically, we want to thank:

  • Our competitors and fantastic grids, without whom this would not have been possible
  • The millions of fans worldwide who have followed these events on TV, online and on social media
  • The represented manufacturers, Alpine, BMW, Ferrari, Mercedes-AMG and Porsche
  • Our sponsors and commercial partners, notably Rolex, Lego Technic, Goodyear, Algorand,
  • Thrustmaster and Total Energies
  • Everyone involved from the ACO and the FIA WEC
  • The entire broadcast production crew including the commentators who talked, analysed,
  • interviewed and entertained from start to finish
  • Our Race Direction team led by Eduardo Freitas, Jimmi Allison and Federico Schiarra
  • Our official timekeepers Alkamel Systems
  • Mission H24 for their support of our Leading Car at the 24 Hours of Le Mans Virtual
  • The sporting team led by Lewis Edmondson
  • The combined marketing teams
  • The combined media and communications team from MSG, ACO, WEC and TraxionGG
  • The logistics team
  • And very special congratulations and appreciation to the whole of the esports organisation team, led by Ben Rossiter-Turner for their professionalism, skill and execution in making the 24 Hours of Le Mans Virtual and all the other rounds of the series happen

Thank you all for being part of another great chapter in esports history and for all that has been achieved together. See you in June for the real 24 Hours of Le Mans and, of course, next year for the fourth edition of the 24 Hours of Le Mans Virtual.”

Motorsport Games Inc. (NASDAQ: MSGM) (“Motorsport Games” or the “Company”) today announced the 24 Hours of Le Mans Virtual, the esports finale to the ever-entertaining Le Mans Virtual Series, takes place this weekend on January 14 and 15, 2023. The all-star entry list has attracted the interest of major broadcasters from around the globe including Motor Trend On Demand in North America, CNBC Pan Latin America and Pan Europe, Eurosport Player across Europe and M-Net SuperSport in the Sub-Saharan regions of Africa.  With broadcasters streaming the event digitally through OTT platforms and on demand services, this exciting and extremely popular esports discipline will be available to millions of homes across the world.

 

The event features motorsport and esports champions from all four corners of the world, including Formula One Champion Max Verstappen, who will be racing from Monaco, Formula 2 Champion Felipe Drugovich in Brazil and Formula 3 Champion Victor Martins in France, who will join IndyCar’s Romain Grosjean and Felix Rosenqvist, plus a host of real world and esports racing stars ready to take on the world’s greatest virtual endurance race. The full SPOTTERS GUIDE can be found here.

 

The storied Silverstone racing track in the UK will be the host venue for a special, live TV show covering this unique two-day event, and the studio will welcome an expert commentary team made up of FIA World Endurance Championship lead commentator Martin Haven, real world racing and esports experts Chris McCarthy and Lewis McGlade, plus highly experienced motorsport commentator Ben Constanduros.  A number of “pitlane” reporters will be based around the world to capture interviews and live action including Hayley Edmonds in Paris and current WEC competitor, 2020 Le Mans Virtual driver and FIA F2 and F3 commentator Alex Brundle in the UK.

 

The 180 competitors – representing 41 different nationalities – piloting the 45 cars (4 drivers in each car in rotation over the 24 hours) will be located on 164 different simulators across the world, and the digital interest from a wide variety of international broadcasters fully reflects the spread of drivers and teams.

 

Eurosport will cover the full 2-day event live throughout its European regions on Eurosport Player, and global coverage will be on Motorsport.tv. With a large number of successful esports racers hailing from Eastern Europe, the twice-round-the-clock event will be shown live in Croatia (Max Sport), Poland (Motowizja FB and SportKlub), Slovakia (Arena) and Ukraine (Sports TV Ch2), while countries such as Malta (TVMSports+) and Turkey (BeIN) will also broadcast live coverage.

 

Motor Trend will cover the full race live in North America on its OTT service, while TYC in Mexico will show the first and last hour of the event within the populous country. Mnet SuperSport and Africa XP will take the broadcast live across Sub-Saharan and Pan-Africa regions, thus extending the coverage to four continents around the world. Finally, live coverage will be aired in Fiji (FBC) and Singapore (delayed) on Singtel.

 

In addition to the live airings above, a wide range of territories will show a special 52-minute highlights show after the event, and information about these broadcasters including CNBC, Disney/Fox in China and Sport 1 in India will be communicated in due course.

 

The ACO and FIA WEC’s official YouTube and social media channels will be showing all the action live from start to finish, as will the Le Mans Virtual Series official website (www.lemansvirtual.com). The broadcast begins at 12:15 GMT (13:15 CET/07:15 EST) and the famous French national flag will be dropped for the start of the biggest endurance esports event of the year at 13:00 GMT (8:00 EST / 14:00 CET).

Another star-studded ENTRY LIST has today been released for the third edition of the 24 Hours of Le Mans Virtual, the final round of the 2022-23 Le Mans Virtual Series season.  The event will take place on 14 & 15 January 2023 and will be held virtually, with the 180 drivers on simulators located all around the world.

 

The award-winning virtual event continues to be a huge draw for drivers at the top of their game in both the real and sim racing worlds. A fantastic line up of drivers includes two-time F1 World Champion Max Verstappen, former F1 and current INDYCAR star Romain Grosjean, FIA F2 Champion Felipe Drugovich, and FIA F3 Champion Victor Martins. Among the entries are three-time World Touring Car Champion Andy Priaulx who will be racing with his son Seb – himself a Porsche Carrera Cup North America Champion – in the Le Mans Virtual Cup guest car. They will be competing with INDYCAR’s Felix Rosenqvist, a noted race winner in both the real and virtual worlds, and Luke Browning, GB3 Champion and Aston Marin Autosport BRDC Young Driver of the Year, together with many, many more well-known names.

 

In addition to real-world racing stars (listed as PRO on the entry list), internationally-renowned esports stars and former 24 Hours of Le Mans Virtual winners such as Jeffrey Rietveld, Joshua Rogers and Nikodem Wisniewski are on the entry list, to name but a few. Also competing will be James Baldwin, recently awarded the prestigious Autosport Award for Esports Driver of the Year. The roster of talented and determined sim racers who will be combining with the pros to provide twice-round-the-clock racing, rivalry and entertainment is truly impressive and they have multiple esports championship titles between them.

 

In total, 180 drivers representing more than 40 different nations will be taking on the legendary Circuit de la Sarthe for the first event in the ACO’s centenary year.  Manufacturers officially represented include Alpine, AMG Mercedes, BMW, Ferrari, Peugeot, Porsche, with renowned drivers such as David Brabham, Romain Grosjean and Olivier Panis also fielding teams.

 

Further details will be revealed in the coming days about individual car liveries, plus how you can follow the 24 Hours of Le Mans Virtual on TV, online and on social media channels around the world.

 

All information on the event can also be found on www.lemansvirtual.com.

 

For further media information contact Fiona Miller, Miller Media & Communications, on +44 7770 371332 or media@lemansvirtual.com

 

 

About Le Mans Virtual Series

Le Mans Virtual Series is a global, elite esports series made up of five rounds which bring together endurance racing and sim racing’ top teams to compete on some of the world’s most famous racetracks. International FIA-licensed real-world drivers are teamed up with elite esports squads to take on endurance classics for a total prize fund of US$250,000, culminating in the prestigious 24 Hours of Le Mans Virtual.  Le Mans Virtual Series is a joint venture between leading racing game developer, publisher and esports ecosystem provider of official motorsport racing series throughout the world, Motorsport Games, and the Automobile Club de l’Ouest (ACO) – the creator and organizer of the world-famous 24 Hours of Le Mans and promoter of the FIA World Endurance Championship (FIA WEC).

 

Round 1                     8 Hours of Bahrain, Bahrain                                        September 17, 2022

Round 2                     4 Hours of Monza, Italy                                               October 8, 2022

Round 3                     6 Hours of Spa, Belgium                                               November 5, 2022

Round 4                     500 Miles of Sebring, USA                                           December 3, 2022

Round 5                     24 Hours of Le Mans Virtual                                        January 14/15, 2023

 

About Motorsport Games:

Motorsport Games, a Motorsport Network company, is a leading racing game developer, publisher and esports ecosystem provider of official motorsport racing series throughout the world. Combining innovative and engaging video games with exciting esports competitions and content for racing fans and gamers, Motorsport Games strives to make the joy of racing accessible to everyone. The Company is the officially licensed video game developer and publisher for iconic motorsport racing series across PC, PlayStation, Xbox, Nintendo Switch and mobile, including NASCAR, INDYCAR, 24 Hours of Le Mans and the British Touring Car Championship (“BTCC”), as well as the industry leading rFactor 2 and KartKraft simulations. rFactor 2 also serves as the official sim racing platform of Formula E, while also powering F1 Arcade through a partnership with Kindred Concepts. Motorsport Games is an award-winning esports partner of choice for 24 Hours of Le Mans, Formula E, BTCC, the FIA World Rallycross Championship and the eNASCAR Heat Pro League, among others. Motorsport Games is building a virtual racing ecosystem where each product drives excitement, every esports event is an adventure and every story inspires.

Guernseymen racers Andy and Sebastian Priaulx will be taking on the 24 Hours of Le Mans Virtual (14/15th January) in the No.24 Le Mans Virtual Cup entry, teaming with sim racers Shaun Arnold (GBR) and Zoltán Várkonyi (HUN). Three-time World Touring Car Champion and multiple race winner in the FIA World Endurance Championship with Ford Chip Ganassi, Andy, has raced with son Seb once before in the prestigious esports endurance event in 2020 and both Multimatic-contracted drivers are really keen to have another go.  Seb is a current WEC driver and class winner with Dempsey Proton Racing and the 2021 Porsche Carrera Cup North American Champion. The Le Mans Virtual Cup is a 4-round competition which offers the rFactor 2 sim community the chance to race at a world-class level in front of a live audience, with a view to earning a seat in the main 24 Hours of Le Mans Virtual at the end of the season. Shaun Arnold and Zoltán Várkonyi are the successful entrants who will be taking the big step onto the world stage in the coming 24-hour event. The full entry list for the 24 Hours of Le Mans Virtual will be released tomorrow (5th January) at 2pm GMT/3pm CET/9am ET and expect to see a star-studded roster of names competing alongside the celebrated father-son pairing from the Channel Islands.Keep up to speed with all the latest news from the Le Mans Virtual Series at lemansvirtual.com and @LeMansVirtual across Instagram, Facebook and Twitter.

About Le Mans Virtual Series

Le Mans Virtual Series is a global, elite esports series made up of five rounds which bring together endurance racing and sim racing’ top teams to compete on some of the world’s most famous racetracks. International FIA-licensed real-world drivers are teamed up with elite esports squads to take on endurance classics for a total prize fund of US$250,000, culminating in the prestigious 24 Hours of Le Mans Virtual.  Le Mans Virtual Series is a joint venture between leading racing game developer, publisher and esports ecosystem provider of official motorsport racing series throughout the world, Motorsport Games, and the Automobile Club de l’Ouest (ACO) – the creator and organizer of the world-famous 24 Hours of Le Mans and promoter of the FIA World Endurance Championship (FIA WEC).

Round 1 – 8 Hours of Bahrain, Bahrain                                 September 17, 2022Round 2 – 4 Hours of Monza, Italy                                         October 8, 2022Round 3 – 6 Hours of Spa, Belgium                                       November 5, 2022Round 4 – 500 Miles of Sebring, USA                                    December 3, 2022Round 5 – 24 Hours of Le Mans Virtual                                 January 14/15, 2023

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