NASCAR SimRacing

NASCAR SimRacing, abbreviated NSR, is a computer racing simulator developed by EA Tiburon and released on February 15, 2005, by EA Sports for Microsoft Windows. The game includes all of the 2004 NEXTEL Cup Series drivers (including Jeremy Mayfield, who was absent from NASCAR 2005: Chase for the Cup) and tracks except Pocono Raceway, which was also absent from NASCAR 2005: Chase for the Cup, due to failed negotiations with licensing. Content from the 2004 NASCAR Busch Series (branded as "NASCAR National Series" in-game due to alcohol advertising regulations) and Craftsman Truck Series (excluding manufacturer branding in the latter) are also included.

NASCAR SimRacing
Cover art featuring the vehicles of Ryan Newman, Ron Hornaday, and Chad Chaffin
Developer(s)EA Tiburon
Publisher(s)EA Sports
Platform(s)Microsoft Windows
Release
  • NA: February 15, 2005
Genre(s)Simulation, Sports, Racing
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

The game features NASCAR's top 3 series, the NASCAR Cup Series, Busch Series, and Craftsman Truck Series. The game features a single-player career mode as well as multiplayer online gameplay. The game also features many paint schemes used during the 2004 and 2005 Cup Series; however the original release featured the 2005 cars replaced with their 2004 counterparts. This game was the last NASCAR game to be released for the PC by EA; the next NASCAR game for PC would be NASCAR The Game: 2013 by Eutechnyx.

Drivers

While a large number of real drivers are present in the Cup, Busch and Truck Series in NASCAR SimRacing, fantasy drivers are still present, sponsored by fictional or unused sponsors. A patch is available at installation to download the 2005 NEXTEL Cup cars as a separate mod. In October 2006 EA Sports shut down the GameSpy multiplayer servers.[1]

Tracks

Many of the tracks in the game were real tracks like Daytona International Speedway and Atlanta Motor Speedway, but there were three fictional tracks: Dodge Raceway Stadium, Levi Strauss Signature Speedway and Red Ball Raceway including the now-defunct Nazareth Speedway.

The shortest track was the Dodge Raceway Stadium with a track length of .375 miles (0.604 km) while the Talladega Superspeedway is the longest track with a track length of 2.66 mi (4.28 km).

References

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