RaceRoom Racing Experience is a free-to-playracing simulator for Microsoft Windows, developed by KW Studios (formerly known as SimBin Studios and Sector3 Studios) and published by RaceRoom Entertainment AG. Their aim is to provide an authentic racing experience through detailed car and track models as well as realistic car behaviour and sounds. The game provides a selection of free-to-play race cars and tracks to drive in multiplayer and single player games modes. Sponsored competitions and other free-to-play events allow users to use premium game content at no cost.
Gameplay
RaceRoom offers many different game modes such as Multiplayer Races, Custom Championships, Single Races against AI, Practice, Leaderboard Challenges and Online Competitions. The simulation also includes an online portal that keeps track of player statistics and leaderboard entries that serve as a platform for the players' activities.
According to Sector3's Christopher Speed, RaceRoom is created and maintained by 10-11 people.[1] Since its release on February 12, 2013, RaceRoom has been updated regularly with new features and content and has received significant improvements in all departments.[2]
RaceRoom is built utilising Image Space Incorporated's[3]isiMotor2 racing simulation game engine. Unlike prior SimBin & Sector3 Studio releases, RaceRoom uses its own proprietary RendR graphics engine[4] which is capable of different times of day, features commonly used post-processing effects and has native support for rain (rain is not featured in Raceroom though). RaceRoom also features a custom audio engine[5] and is often cited as the benchmark sounding racing simulation on PC.[6] In a March 2016 interview with Inside Sim Racing, Sector 3's Jean-François Chardon stated that the original ISI code remaining in RaceRoom is "less than 20 percent".[7]
The same month Christopher Speed posted a thread on the official Sector3 Studios forums titled 'In response to the so-called 'leak'... that a 'very small team investigating and evaluating newer technologies for the future'.[8] Christopher Speed included an in-game screenshot of R3E running on Unreal Engine[9] of a BMW Z4 GT3 at the Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps. In a 2017 interview with racing simulation website Race Department,[10] Christopher Speed revealed that RaceRoom would replace the RendR graphics engine with Unreal Engine 4[11][12] with RaceRoom's conversion to this engine aided by a partnership with SimBin Studios UK[13] who were utilising this engine for the canceled GTR 3 project.[14]
In 2022, a new car pack was added to emulate the 2021 DTM Championship. New car models introduced with the pack include the Ferrari 488 GT3 EVO 2020 and the McLaren 720S GT3.[20]