News

F1 Sim Racing World Championship 2026: DreamHack Birmingham Preview

The most competitive sim racing championship on the planet starts this weekend in Birmingham. Here's everything you need to know — the format, the teams, the hardware, and where to watch live.

By Driver Labs | | 6 min read

F1 Sim Racing Championship event
LIVE THIS WEEKEND: DreamHack Birmingham hosts Round 1 of the F1 Sim Racing World Championship 2026, March 27-29. Follow the action live on Formula 1's official digital channels.
Affiliate Disclosure: Driver Labs is reader-supported. If you buy through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission at no extra cost to you.

What Is the F1 Sim Racing World Championship?

The F1 Sim Racing World Championship — formerly known in various incarnations — is the highest-profile competitive sim racing series in the world, sanctioned by Formula 1 itself. It pits professional esports drivers and real-world racing talent against each other in identical F1 car simulations, with every team running the same Fanatec hardware to ensure nobody has a mechanical advantage.

The 2026 season is the most ambitious yet: 12 rounds across the calendar year, a record $750,000 total prize pool, and the first season following the landmark multi-year Fanatec-F1 partnership renewal announced March 23, 2026. This is no longer a side event — it's a legitimate pillar of F1's digital engagement strategy.

Format & Schedule

Each round of the championship follows a consistent format:

The season calendar spans 12 events, with DreamHack Birmingham serving as the season opener. Subsequent rounds will be held at a mix of physical event venues (including the F1 Media and Technology Centre at Biggin Hill) and remote broadcast events.

Why DreamHack Birmingham Is the Right Start

For the first time, the F1 Sim Racing World Championship opens at DreamHack in the United Kingdom — one of Europe's largest gaming and esports festivals. This is a deliberate statement: sim racing belongs alongside competitive gaming's mainstream events, not tucked away in a corner of motorsport.

The festival atmosphere brings casual visitors who may never have considered sim racing into contact with professional setups — Fanatec wheels and pedals on display, live races on big screens, drivers available for meet-and-greets. The crossover potential for the sim racing hobby is significant.

The Fanatec-Only Hardware Rule

Every team competing in the championship uses identical Fanatec hardware — the same wheel bases, wheels, pedals, and shifters. This isn't just a rule, it's a pillar of the series' credibility. No team can buy their way to a performance advantage through better equipment.

The Fanatec CSL DD and Fanatec DD1 wheel bases are the most commonly seen in the series. Notably, this represents the first season running under Fanatec's renewed F1 partnership (confirmed March 23, 2026), meaning new F1-licensed wheelrims and hardware may be introduced mid-season.

For aspiring sim racers, watching the championship is also a research exercise: you're seeing the absolute best players in the world perform on the same equipment you can buy off Amazon. If you want to know what good sim racing equipment feels like at its limit, these are the reference times.

The Teams & Drivers to Watch

The 2026 grid brings together a fascinating mix of profiles: professional F1 drivers who race in the real world, dedicated sim racers who have built reputations in iRacing and ACC, and esports athletes who have crossed over from other racing titles.

Key storylines entering Round 1:

How to Watch DreamHack Birmingham

Round 1 of the F1 Sim Racing World Championship is being broadcast live across F1's official channels:

DreamHack Birmingham runs March 27-29. If you're in the UK, general festival admission gives you access to the sim racing stage area. For everyone else, the streams are your best access point to the action.

Why the 2026 Season Matters for Sim Racing

Three things make this season different from any before:

1. The money is real. $750,000 in prize money isn't charity — it's investment. Sponsors and F1 itself view this as a legitimate growth channel for engaging younger audiences with motorsport content.

2. The Fanatec partnership validates sim racing's mainstream future. When F1 renewed with Fanatec for a multi-year term just days before the season opener, it signalled that sim racing hardware partnerships aren't going away — they're expanding. Expect new F1-licensed Fanatec products throughout 2026.

3. The line between "real driver" and "sim racer" keeps blurring. Multiple F1 drivers have publicly credited sim racing with helping their real-world performance. Several professional drivers competing in the 2026 championship are also real-world racers. The distinction that once separated these two worlds is eroding fast.

The Driver Labs View

If you're a sim racer who hasn't followed the F1 Sim Racing World Championship before, 2026 is the year to start. The level of competition is genuinely world-class, the production quality is excellent, and — crucially — you're watching the best drivers in the world use the same Fanatec equipment you can buy today. It's part entertainment, part education, and entirely worth your time this weekend.

We'll be publishing full round-by-round coverage throughout the 2026 season. Bookmark our F1 Sim Racing Championship hub page for all our coverage in one place.