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Circuit de Charade and Crosslé cars

Welcome to the second preview of our December content, the Drivers Pack. Here we’re going to talk about two more cars plus the track that is part of the release: a pair of continuation classics from Crosslé that perfectly match France’s Charade circuit.

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What you’ll get are two very different driving experiences on one absolutely stunning circuit. From Crosslé we have their 90F single seater matched with the 9S classic prototype. And with Charade you can drive them in their natural habitat, as the two models are part of the renowned Classic Racing School that’s based at the track.



France is rightly seen as the birthplace of motorsport: there are over 90 circuits on record as being used for racing over the last century, from small scratch circuits set up to race between local villages at the turn of the 20th century to the enduring legend that is Le Mans. But Charade deserves to be up there with the best: it’s an absolute driver’s paradise.



The Charade track is one of Europe’s unsung gems. Tucked amongst the folds of Massif Central’s (thankfully extinct) volcanoes near Clermont-Ferrand in the centre of France, the current layout is a cut-down version of the original fearsome giant that carved 8km into the mountains and was home to the French Grand Prix on and off through the ’60s and ‘70s. The current 4km layout was created in 1989, preserving the mighty challenge of the original while creating a more compact and useable circuit. And if you out-brake yourself into Turn 2, you’ll end up on the public roads that still mark out the old Grand Prix circuit!



It’s a tight and twisty track, a roller-coaster ride up and down the local peak. The fast run through the opening sector puts you at the bottom of the climb uphill, through off-camber switchbacks that you have to learn to thread with precision - and in the Crosslés, grace. A carousel curve at the crest then throws you into a sequence of fast sweepers back down to the start of the lap. It’s a blast. It’s the definition of a driver’s track.



The pair of Crosslés we’re featuring were developed specifically for the Classic Racing School at Charade. The 90F authentically recreates the feel of a 1960s Formula Ford: it’s a modern build based on the 1969 Crosslé 16F, integrating modern safety standards and reliability but delivering all the same raw driving sensations as the original. FFs are always lauded by purists as the ultimate single seater experience for the masses. Simple and uncomplicated, inputs are direct and immediate; grip is mechanical – there’s zero aero to worry about, so it’s all about the balance of your left and right feet combined with the feelings in your backside. Which is crazily close to the ground! This is a tiny car.



The 90F is a compact package, but it’s also fast. Shockingly fast. It can lap Charade at the pace as a Porsche 911 GT3 Cup, for example – which in Raceroom will be a good target to aim at. It may only deliver 110bhp from its 2.0-litre Zetec engine and have four gears, but in a car that weighs just 420kg you don’t need anything else. Dismiss a car like this at your peril: it doesn’t get much more visceral.



The 9S has a similar historical background. The original car was developed to compete in Group 6 races in the mid-‘60s, and Crosslé continue to produce it in exactly the same spec. Like the 90F it features a Zetec engine, but this twin-cam is tuned to 220bhp, giving you a lot more power to play with. You’ll have an extra gear to play with, plus a limited slip diff to help with handling.



It drives with quite a neutral feel, even though it uses road tyres and is over-powered compared to grip. It’s a relatively easy car to pilot: forgiving for beginners, exhilarating for experts. We’d recommend jumping in this before the 90F for that reason: it’s more pliant and stable to start in, while having the same kind of raw, old school feeling to it.



The 9S is a car that you can instantly jump in and be quite quick in – but one where it will take time to discover the ultimate performance. And that’s where the enjoyment comes in: this is not a car you’ll likely be firing off at the first corner. Or the second one at Charade, even if you wanted to find the old Grand Prix track…



The Crosslé 90F and 9S, along with the Charade race track, are part of Raceroom’s Drivers Pack, which will be available in early December.



Praga R1 - Coming in December

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Downforce is a mysterious concept. You have to believe that invisible air will interact with your car’s aerodynamics and enable it to deliver cornering performance in a way it wouldn’t otherwise be able to do. It requires a completely different driving style from a car that generates lap-time from mechanical grip and driver bravery. Corners you’d feather in a touring car become arcs where you bury the throttle and experience the converse effect from the expected: the faster you go the more downforce you generate and the quicker you can go round the corner. You just have to believe, as you tip the scales from mechanical grip to aero, and the air pressure turns from enemy to ally.



Thankfully, in a race sim you can explore that balance without jeopardy, and Raceroom’s latest aero-laden machine will be the Praga R1, part of our Drivers Pack release that’s due in early December. This pack is deliberately curated to contain a mini ladder of cars that give you a cross section of very different driving experiences, but that all very much come under the headline of Fun To Drive. The R1 represents the top level in our Drivers Pack: downforce-laden, prototype-style performance, all in one svelte and incredibly lightweight package.



We’ve developed the Raceroom Praga R1 from official CAD data, combined with our usual attention to detail and collaboration directly with the company. We’ve witnessed the car up close, and built the car and its physics hand-in-hand with Praga’s Product & Operations Specialist, Chris Bridle, as well as the drivers that emerged victorious in the 2022 Praga Cup UK: sim racing superstar Jimmy Broadbent and break-out talent Gordie Mutch.



The Praga R1 is a car that works for novices and veterans alike. For the former it provides both excitement and a progressive learning curve that allows you to get fast, quickly. For pros – and experienced sim racers in Raceroom – as ever there are those final tenths that can achieved, that delve into the car’s final percentages of performance. It’s why we think it fits so well into our theme for December, as does Chris Bridle: “It’s fantastic to see such an accurate model of the Praga R1 on a platform that is well established but also really accessible to sim racers!”



The Praga name may not be on the tip of racers’ tongues, but the Czech company have been quietly working away over the last decade to put the marque front and centre in the motorsport world. It’s where it deserves to be: this is a proud company whose history actually stretches back over a century. The 2022 version of the R1 that we feature in Raceroom is the latest update of Praga’s track weapon, weighing in at an insanely light 660kg but packing a 365bhp, turbo-charged punch. In real life, it barely comes up to your waist: the top of the cockpit scoop is under a metre off the ground.



The R1’s power comes from a retuned 2.0-litre, four-cylinder turbo taken from a Formula Renault single-seater, and the suspension features inboard pushrods and double wishbones. The bodywork is all carbon fibre and features exposed cut-outs that accentuate its mecha-warrior looks: this is one aggressive-looking car, that looks like the bodywork has been shrink-wrapped around a single-seater.



The R1 has phenomenal braking power to balance the speed and its relatively diminutive size. Combined with that low weight (which is helped by a high-spec carbon tub at the car's heart), the R1 has a go-kart edge to the handling: but a go-kart that can pull 3G through a corner. Although the bodywork looks the business, there's a strong emphasis on underbody tunnels to generate LMP2-levels of downforce. However, it's also stiffly sprung and has an open differential, plus the turbo does take some managing in terms of delivery – which means it's a car where you can't let concentration slip. But driving an R1 is a quick – in every sense – way to scare big and heavy GT3s that might think they’re going to breeze past.


Our Praga R1 comes with all the main liveries used in the Praga Cup UK, including some beauties designed by Frank Stephenson – a man who has designed cars that include the McLaren P1, Maserati MC12 and Ferrari FXX!



The final word goes to Praga Cup UK co-champion Jimmy Broadbent:
“It's been awesome working with Raceroom to bring our Praga to the sim world. The detail on this car is amazing and honestly it's surreal to see it recreated to this level in sim!”



The Praga R1 is part of Raceroom’s Drivers Pack, which will be available in early December.



The Drivers Pack - Coming in December

When you learn to drive a street car, there’s a process. You start on something small, something slow - maybe you never even learn how to use a manual shift. You build up; you usually also have someone by the side of you, telling you not to drive into the wall.


But in race sims there’s an expectation that we can jump into a high-powered racing car and immediately be on the pace. And more importantly, enjoy the experience. But, the more accurate the sim, naturally the more difficult some cars are to drive.


In Raceroom we’ve got some monsters: 1970s Group 5 cars that have so much turbo lag you could get a good night’s sleep before their ferocious power kicks in; we’ve got 1990s DTM racers that you have to push to the edge if you want to extract the ultimate lap time; there are the fearsome 2000s GT1s, all firepower, that you have to bully round the track; and how about modern prototypes and Formula cars, awash with technology and switches, that require your brain to be operating on as high a level as your hands and feet.


Everything happens more quickly in a racecar. Everything is more exciting. But everything is less forgiving.


The worst thing is to jump in a sim, pick your dream car and then fire it off at the first corner. Sure, you can always press reset in a sim, but sometimes the experience will be better by slowing things down. By taking a breath and concentrating on progressing and learning. And enjoyment.


So for our annual big December release, we present the Drivers Pack. It’s not specifically a beginners pack – although it will serve perfectly in that guise, if you’re looking to start your career – but it is supposed to present a sensible progression through a set of cars that deliver very different performance levels. Most importantly, these cars are fun to drive. Really fun.


We’ve included the latest version of a modern classic - the go-to starter car for drivers all round the world, Mazda’s iconic MX-5 (or Miata for old school North Americans).


Next up are two actual classics from Crosslé, a manufacturer you may not have heard of, but who have a history stretching back to the ‘50s. We’re presenting the modern continuation versions of models that have been in production for decades, but still deliver thrills - and occasional spills if you don’t get them right.


Directly linked to Crosslé is the circuit included in this release: the epic twists and turns of Charade, buried deep in France’s volcano country – and home to Crosslé’s driving school.


Finally, a pocket rocket where you have to balance the power of a modern mini prototype with belief in the magic of downforce: Praga’s R1.


Over the next couple of weeks we’ll bring you more information on each of the four cars included in the release: how we’ve modelled them and brought the physics to life, plus some recommendations on how to drive them. And just enough history to not bore anyone!

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[h2]Changelog:[/h2]
  • Monza - Updated to 2022 specs, including the Alboreto painting on the runoff of Curva Parabolica.
  • Fixed - Suzuka - Hole on the outside of Degner area
  • Fixed - Brands Hatch - Prevented multiple vehicles from spawning at the same spot as the player
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  • Fixed - Nordschleife - Prevented multiple vehicles from spawning at the same spot as the player
  • Fixed - Stowe - Prevented multiple vehicles from spawning at the same spot as the player

Black Week Sale in RaceRoom

The biggest Sale of the year has started!

🔥 Up to 50% discount during BlackWeek
👉 game.raceroom.com/store

  • 180+ cars
  • 50+ tracks
  • Accurate physics
  • High quality Force Feedback
  • Immersive sounds
  • Epic ranked multiplayer system


Raceroom has been producing high quality sim racing content for almost a decade, and the Black Week sale is the perfect time to get your hands on all of it in one go – for one amazing price. The Premium Pack contains all our racecars and tracks; we’ve got one of the most diverse sets of sim content on the market, with over 180 cars from every major category and covering 50 years of motorsport, complemented by over 50 internationally renowned tracks.

Raceroom allows you to race the cars you want, when you want: it features accurate physics with high quality force feedback effects, immersive sounds and an epic ranked multiplayer system where you can test your skills against other drivers!