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  2. DrawRace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DrawRace

    The Appera wrote " DrawRace is a rather novel concept in video game racing. Instead of actually controlling the car, you simply trace the path around the track your car should take. Then you sit back and watch it race. It honestly sounds like a boring concept, but in practice it's quite entertaining.

  3. DrawRace 2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DrawRace_2

    DrawRace 2 is a racing video game developed by Ubisoft RedLynx and published by EA Chillingo. It was released September 1, 2011 for iOS devices, and serves as the sequel to DrawRace. It is played by drawing an ideal racing line on the game's screen with a finger. The car then follows this line during a race.

  4. Racing line - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Racing_line

    In motorsport, the racing line or simply "the line" is the optimal path around a race course. [1] In most cases, the line makes use of the entire width of the track to lengthen the radius of a turn: entering at the outside edge, touching the "apex"—a point on the inside edge—then exiting the turn by returning outside.

  5. rFactor 2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RFactor_2

    rFactor 2 is a computer racing simulator developed by Image Space Incorporated (taken over by Studio 397 in 2016) and released for Windows in 2013. Like its predecessor rFactor, rFactor2 is designed to be modified and used by professional racing teams for driver training and race car development.

  6. Racetrack (game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Racetrack_(game)

    Racetrack is a paper and pencil game that simulates a car race, played by two or more players. The game is played on a squared sheet of paper, with a pencil line tracking each car's movement. The rules for moving represent a car with a certain inertia and physical limits on traction, and the resulting line is reminiscent of how real racing cars ...

  7. STEM Racing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/STEM_Racing

    F1 in Schools Competition Track. STEM Racing (formerly F1 in Schools) is an international STEM competition endorsed by Formula 1 for students aged 9–19. Groups of 3–6 students have to design and manufacture a miniature F1 car using CAD/CAM and CAE design tools. The cars are powered by CO 2 cartridges and are attached to a track by a nylon ...

  8. Line Rider - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Line_Rider

    Čadež first uploaded Line Rider to his Deviantart account fšk on September 23, 2006, [4] and it garnered 10,000 viewers within 24 hours. [14] However, the game's popularity escalated after a Digg user named Unconed posted about the game in the fall of 2006; this led to several users posting screen captured footage of the drawings to YouTube, which all totaled 15 million views by December 2006.

  9. Circuit Gilles Villeneuve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circuit_Gilles_Villeneuve

    However, over the years the circuit has transformed into a power track, with straight line speed being very much a priority. Between 1986 and 1988 (with a one-year hiatus occurring in 1987), the pitlane and start-finish straight were relocated from the hairpin to the exit of the fast right-left chicane, which became the final corner.