Project Motor Racing 2.0 brings new physics, UI and online systems

Project Motor Racing's Update 2.0 rebuilds core systems and refines handling, online integrity and career progression

The release of Update 2.0 for Project Motor Racing represents a broad rethink of the sim’s foundations. Published by GIANTS Software and developed by Straight4 Studios, the patch—released March 25, 2026—follows months of community testing and incremental fixes. The work targets presentation, driving fidelity, online fairness and the long-form experience of the game’s Career Mode, and it arrives alongside a limited-time promotion designed to invite more players to try the revised base.

Beyond polish, the update touches gameplay elements that matter to sim racers: an overhauled user interface, a redesigned tyre model and handling curve, revamped multiplayer systems and clearer career progression. The team also signalled ongoing content support, with the Japanese GT500 Pack slated to arrive March 31st as the first official DLC. Taken together, these changes aim to make the sim more approachable while increasing technical depth for experienced drivers.

User interface and the player journey

Navigation and clarity were top priorities: every menu screen has been rebuilt so players can move from car selection to race weekend setup more quickly. The new UI adds contextual tooltips that explain setup parameters and force feedback choices, making adjustments less mysterious for newcomers. Career Mode now feels more goal-driven with improved event text, new podium sequences, sponsor integrations that include real-world brands such as Liqui Moly, and explicit trophies that show your long-term progress. These presentation changes are meant to reduce friction and convey momentum across a full motorsport career.

Driving dynamics and the revised physics core

At the heart of Update 2.0 is a comprehensive rewrite of how cars behave on track. The team focused on how load builds on the tyre, how grip breaks away and how vehicles recover after losing traction by implementing a new tyre model. That change underpins improvements to braking stability, throttle response and the interaction of driver aids. Specific car groups—LMDh, GT3, GT4, Porsche 992 Cup, GT and N-GT—received class-specific tuning to provide a more readable and progressive feeling through both wheels and pads.

What changed under the hood

Testing involved a compact but experienced group of sim racers and engineers who helped validate handling updates. The result is clearer transitions between grip and slip, refined ABS and traction control behaviour, more lifelike turbo and throttle response, and improvements to collision reaction. Gamepad and force feedback responses were tuned to communicate vehicle behaviour more faithfully so drivers can translate on-track sensations into faster lap times without resorting to unrealistic assistance.

Online racing: fairness, stability and structure

Multiplayer received a major stability and integrity pass. Update 2.0 introduces a revised anti-cheat implementation, backend support for incident reporting and session-flow improvements like smarter handling of late joins. A new License Points system aims to encourage cleaner conduct in Ranked Online by rewarding responsible driving and protecting competitive events. The update also prepares Ranked playlists to include all car classes starting April 1 and adds ModHub integration for online modes to broaden community-led content.

Cleaner multiplayer experience

These online changes are engineered to make races you can trust: consistent sessions, reduced disruption from late entrants, and tools to surface and handle incidents. Whether you prefer structured ranked championships or casual social events, the focus is on predictability and fairness so time invested in practice and competition yields meaningful results.

Visual polish, performance and what comes next

Graphical and stability work accompanies gameplay updates. Lighting across circuits and car presentation were boosted to improve atmosphere during race weekends, while backend optimisations target smoother performance under race load. The developers have framed Update 2.0 as a milestone rather than a finish line: it consolidates learnings since launch and establishes a more solid base for future updates and DLC. To players who waited for this moment, the message is clear—the sim has been reset and the grid is ready for more people to join.

In short, Project Motor Racing’s substantial patch redefines the player’s first contact with the sim, sharpens the driving model, stabilises online competition and tightens career progression. If you follow digital motorsport or are hunting for a refreshed racing sim, now is a logical time to jump in, try the handling updates and see how the new systems change the way you race.

Scritto da Staff

Inside Forza Horizon: Japanese car festival rewards and PC ray tracing details