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Esports News: Virgin Racing approaching FE Esports races like a real-world round

Sam Bird reckons his Envision Virgin Racing team are approaching each round of the Formula E Race at Home Challenge Esports competition "as if it were a real race weekend"

The eight-race series, which will conclude with a double points finale, runs in partnership with Motorsport Games to raise money in support of the UNICEF coronavirus relief fund.

Bird was the last of the 24 official championship drivers to enter the online championship owing to poor internet connection, but ran as high as fifth on his debut last weekend.

His team-mate Robin Frijns climbed from sixth to finish second in the race around the Electric Docks circuit, which was created specifically for the rFactor 2 sim racing game.

Bird said his team was holding regular meetings either side of each round to keep the staff race sharp.

"I would say Envision Virgin Racing are taking this opportunity, because it is an opportunity, to still try and use it as if it were a real race weekend," he said in an online FE press conference.

"OK, there's intricacies of the real car that are not there in the sim world.

"It's much more a case of driving flat-out because there's only a couple of things we can change.

"However, we're having meetings online, we're talking all the time, full intercom systems.

"It's taken really seriously just so that everybody can keep fresh in this very strange time that we're going through right now."

Every driver in the Formula E Race at Home Challenge runs with a fixed set-up and all cars have equal performance.

The Esports competition also does away with the real-life power increases of Attack Mode and Fanboost.

Notably, the virtual FE cars have two gears rather than a single-speed direct drive powertrains.

BMW Andretti driver Alex Sims, whose team-mate Maximilian Guenther has won both points-paying races so far, reckoned the game offered a realistic representation.

He told Autosport: "When you boil it down to the fundamentals of how you achieve the lap time, it's pretty damn similar.

"It just feels very alien to me on a simulator, I'm terrible at them.

"But maybe if you are Stoffel [Vandoorne] or Max or some of the really good simulator drivers, they may well have got ways to get the feedback from the simulator to understand how to get the lap time to a representative level.

In the pre-season test race around the shortened Monaco FE circuit, Guenther topped qualifying with a 51.6-second lap - 1.6s slower than the real-life time of polesitter Jean-Eric Vergne in the 2018-19 E-Prix.

Speaking for the latest episode of his team's 'Re:charge @ home' podcast, Jaguar driver James Calado added: "What is realistic is the racing side of it, where you try and respect each other."

The third round of the Race at Home Challenge (Saturday 9 May) is available to watch via the Formula E website, Motorsport.com, Facebook, YouTube, Twitter and Twitch.

The stream starts at 1530 BST.

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