With its release set for November 25, 2025, Project Motor Racing is shaping up to be one of the most ambitious simulation titles in years. Developed by Straight4 Studios and published by GIANTS Software, the game will arrive on PC (Steam), PlayStation 5, and Xbox Series X|S, aiming squarely at the dedicated sim racing audience. Straight4 is made up of developers who previously worked on Project CARS, and this project represents a return to serious, detail-oriented motorsport simulation.

At launch, Project Motor Racing will feature more than 70 licensed cars across 13 classes, ranging from modern GT3s and Hypercars to vintage race machines such as the IMSA GTO and 964 Trophy. The team has also confirmed 28 global circuits built using laser scanning, each recreated with millimeter accuracy. Early footage shows environments that react naturally to lighting, temperature, and weather, which is part of the game’s standout feature known as True2Track.
True2Track is the core of Project Motor Racing’s realism. It models changing weather conditions, full 24-hour lighting cycles, and evolving track grip. Rubber builds up as cars pass, rain washes it away, and drying lines form as the track heats under sunlight. The result is a dynamic racing surface that changes from lap to lap. Combined with a physics system powered by Straight4’s Hadron engine and the mod-friendly GIANTS Engine 10, the handling model promises to capture the genuine sensation of a professional race car under load.
The single-player experience will include a career mode with sponsorships, budgets, and team management, giving players both the driving and strategic sides of motorsport. Multiplayer will feature online events and ranked competition, although the specifics of matchmaking and safety ratings have not yet been revealed. On PC, the game will also include VR support, though console VR support has been delayed while the developers prioritize stability and physics tuning.
A major talking point is the introduction of a user-generated content (UGC) portal that allows modding on both PC and consoles. This system will let players share cars, tracks, and other creations in a curated ecosystem, following GIANTS Software’s experience with mod support in the Farming Simulator series. For many players, this could become one of the most important aspects of the game’s longevity.
The Year 1 Bundle edition for PC is listed at $89.99 USD, which includes the base game, a GTE Decade Pack as a pre-order bonus, and the Year 1 Season Pass. While additional content plans have not been detailed, Straight4 has hinted at ongoing expansions and DLC packs that could introduce more cars, historic content, and additional circuits over time.
Project Motor Racing enters a highly competitive market dominated by titles like Assetto Corsa Competizione, iRacing, and Automobilista 2. However, with its blend of authentic car physics, adaptive track surfaces, and cross-platform mod support, it could carve out its own identity as the next evolution of realistic racing simulation.
For now, sim racing fans are watching closely. If Straight4 and GIANTS deliver what they have promised, Project Motor Racing could easily become one of the defining racing sims of this generation.