In what might be the single biggest endurance event in sim racing history, the 2025 iRacing Daytona 24 powered by VCO delivered not just new records, but stories—of perseverance, teamwork, strategy, and unexpected challenges. With 23,397 drivers taking part and nearly 3 million laps logged across four split sessions, the scale was immense. But as always, the real drama came in the moments between the splits: in the rain, behind the wheel, and in the pits.
Tales from the Field
Traffic, Rain & Risk
One poignant theme in many of the community threads was how rain and traffic mixed to make or break races. A user writing from “the 12 PM session” mentioned:
“Had about 4 hours of rain, 1 hour of it was heavy … many cars were still driving the longer they were fast on slicks.” Reddit
For many teams, decisions about when to pit, when to push, and when to protect the car became as critical as outright pace. In some splits, rain struck hard enough to force massive shifts in strategy, while others raced mostly dry—making every weather forecast part of the race plan.

Incident Counts, Survival & Strategy
B2O (Band of Others) Endurance provided a standout narrative. As shared in their recap, they fielded two cars (GT3 class), spanned multiple time splits, and adapted to issues that any endurance team would dread: server reliability, driver swaps gone awry, and fluctuating conditions.
- One driver, Jes, completed the most laps for the team (164), consistently gaining positions each time he was in the car.
- Another driver, Noël, set the team’s fastest lap, despite the chaos around them.
- They also faced “server storms” that knocked out visibility or dropped players, but kept pushing. Their strategy, particularly in fuel saving and safe stints, nearly paid off for a top-6 in class result.
Their reflection sums up what many felt: finishing this thing—and doing it with low incidents—is sometimes the real win. These stories don’t always show up on the podium, but they define these races.
What This Meant in a Bigger Picture
- New machinery made a big splash, too. The 2025 event saw the first use in this event of the Ferrari 499P, Acura NSX GT3 EVO 22, Chevrolet Corvette Z06 GT3.R, Ford Mustang GT3, McLaren 720S GT3 EVO among others, expanding both the variety and the complexity of competition.
- Matchmaking continues to matter. Many users reported that outside of the top splits, races were more driven by car choice, comfort, strategy, and traffic management than sheer raw speed. It’s not enough to be fast—being consistent, making safe choices, and working well as a team still dominate.
Quotes from the Community
“Worst day of its life… So far!” — on CPU load when the field size hit maximum. Reddit
“If you’re in anything other than the top few splits run what you’re comfortable in. The pace difference across the lineup will be a few tenths at most … cars are usually close enough in lap time that … traffic management and strategy decisions matter more.” Reddit
These reflections show the shared respect for the grind, for the patience, and for the many little choices that add up in a 24-hour battle.
Highlights by the Numbers (Remixed)
Metric | 2025 Daytona 24 |
---|---|
Total drivers (all splits) | 23,397 |
Unique drivers | 19,125 |
Teams entered | 5,633 |
Laps completed | 2,915,614 |
Miles covered | Over 10.3 million |
Hours behind the wheel | 89,444 |
The 2025 iRacing Daytona 24 was more than just bigger numbers. It was deeper stories. For many, simply finishing with dignity was as meaningful as chasing wins. For others, it was about finding speed in chaos: navigating traffic, surviving server storms, making the right tire calls.
If there’s one thing this event proves, it’s that sim racing in these major Special Events isn’t just about powering through; it’s about thinking, adapting, persevering. And with every record smashed, the stage is set even higher for the next one.
