

Since Project Motor Racing launched on November 25, Straight4 Studios has been locked in on listening to player feedback and adjusting course where needed. The team says the community has shaped every step of the post launch process, helping highlight the areas that matter most and setting clear expectations for what the experience should become.
The goal is to continue shaping Project Motor Racing into the game players believe it can be. Over the past few weeks, the focus has been on delivering quick but meaningful updates, starting with patches aimed at addressing major performance concerns. At the same time, ongoing work has gone into refining vehicle handling and tire behavior across multiple classes, along with targeted improvements to online stability to strengthen multiplayer lobbies and ranked racing.
Looking ahead, Straight4 Studios plans to keep that momentum going with steady updates focused on stability, performance, vehicle dynamics, visuals and online reliability. The team is also actively developing new features requested by the community, with an emphasis on deeper immersion, better racecraft and a stronger overall sim experience.
More information on what’s coming is expected to be shared over the weeks and months ahead, but the team has outlined some of the upcoming improvements they’re currently working on and some of the features in development.
Ongoing Improvements
- Continued handling refinements across all vehicle classes
- UI and UX improvements throughout the game
- A complete overhaul of the penalty system
- Continued upgrades to online stability and functionality
- Rendering and visual enhancements
- Performance and engine optimisation
- Audio improvements
- Visual upgrades to vehicles and environments
- Input and haptics updates
- Pit lane and pit stop improvements
- AI opponents optimisation
New Features in Development
- Radar system
- Spotter support
- Rolling starts
- VR support for PC
- New online modes
- Native triple screen support
- Frontend and menu overhaul
- Career Mode restructuring and expansion