Or sim racing setup, the terms are entirely interchangeable. Anyway, the first and possibly most important thing is the steering wheel you choose. Because without a wheel you might as well use a regular controller or keyboard and mouse, and then what’s the point of setting up a sim racing environment? Racing wheels from Logitech, Fanatec, and Thrustmaster are considered the best around, and have different varieties.
The original ones used plain old gears, but have been replaced by belt driven wheels for entry and mid-range models. These use a belt to generate movement and force feedback. They’re fine for most people, but direct drive wheels offer greater accuracy and mimic real car steering wheels almost to a tee. Naturally, direct drive wheels are pricier than belt drive wheels because they mount a powerful motor right next to the steering wheel, but the investment may be worthwhile if you crave the most authentic experience.
Next are pedals, with most sets offering the expected clutch, brake, and gas pedals. Here what matters most is grip, followed by feel and feedback. Note some cheaper models may only have brakes and gas. The cheaper ones are also made of plastic, while premium peripherals go with metal and rubberized surfaces, like real cars. Some manufactures make combo sets that put the wheel, pedals, and even a driving seat together, but those cost a lot. And don’t laugh, but there are versions that include a parking brake or handbrake. Yes, those are very serious about realism.
Racing chairs have become very closely associated with gaming, and one of those will do if you want to save or already have one. Don’t go with a regular office chair or something really cheap, it won’t be comfortable and will pull you out of the experience. We wholeheartedly advise you to get a sim racing seat, which is entirely different from a racing chair. Sim racing seats have the same low stance of car seats, or even race car seats. They’re angled for driving positions, not typing on a keyboard. For a comprehensive sim racing setup, one of those seats would be great.
For audio, you can add speakers, headphones, or rely on monitor audio. If your monitor’s any good, you’ll have sound enough with that and won’t need dedicated speakers, but we’ll get to this in a second.
Finally, the display. We’ve looked at this in a recent article, and concluded that a single, ultrawide, curved monitor is the best option for immersive sim racing. Luckily, that’s the one thing we at BenQ actually make ourselves!