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  2. HUD (video games) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HUD_(video_games)

    In most cases, the player can display them all by pausing the game or pressing a button. Some games also give players control over the HUD, allowing them to hide elements and customize position, size, color, and opacity. [2] World of Warcraft is notable for allowing players to significantly modify and enhance the user interface through Lua ...

  3. Sim racing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sim_racing

    Players could change everything about the game: drivers, teams, graphics, physics, car shapes, and eventually even the racetracks. Offline leagues reached their peak with GP2 in 1998. In 1996, NASCAR Racing 2 was released, further improving the original, and the number of sim racers exploded.

  4. Direct-drive sim racing wheel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct-drive_sim_racing_wheel

    Issues, quality, and performance indicators of direct-drive wheels, and of sim racing wheels in general, include detail and fidelity of force feedback, smooth torque transmission, nearly-zero backlash, rotary encoder resolution, clipping, dynamic range, torque ripple, [2] cogging torque, [10] drivers and digital signal processing with control electronics, [2] [11] signal filtering, [8 ...

  5. Split/Second: Velocity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Split/Second:_Velocity

    In Split/Second, players take part in a fictional reality TV programme where participants race for money and fame. Throughout a race, players can build up their "power play" meter by performing stunts, such as jumps and mid-air overtakes, and precision driving, such as drafting opponents and drifting.

  6. rFactor 2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RFactor_2

    Rubber is dynamically laid on the track surface in real time during a race session by the player and the AI. The rubber can carry over to the next sessions. This calls for the player constantly having to adapt to the advancing track conditions during a race weekend. In a dry race weekend, this means more and more available grip throughout.

  7. Blocking the plate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blocking_the_plate

    A catcher attempts to block a baserunner from reaching home plate. In baseball, blocking the plate is a technique performed by a catcher to prevent a runner from scoring. The act of blocking the plate accounted for most of the physical contact in Major League Baseball prior to the 2014 season, when it was outlawed except when the catcher already has possession of the ball.

  8. Head-up display - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Head-up_display

    A typical HUD contains three primary components: a projector unit, a combiner, and a video generation computer. [3] The projection unit in a typical HUD is an optical collimator setup: a convex lens or concave mirror with a cathode-ray tube, light emitting diode display, or liquid crystal display at its focus.

  9. iRacing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IRacing

    24 cars and 32 tracks are provided in the subscription's base content. Additional vehicles and tracks are available for individual purchase, though players must maintain an active iRacing subscription to access these after purchase. Ranked races in the Rookie license class primarily utilize the content included with the base subscription. [17]