The Pathway
Our founders spent years in real motorsport — karting, Formula cars and GT racing — before starting LOR. We share that experience with the drivers who come through our programmes, in the hope it helps them on their own journey from sim to circuit.
Legion of Racers was founded by two motorsport enthusiasts who'd spent years racing for real. We saw first-hand how high the barriers to entry can be, and how much talent never gets a fair shot at the sport because of cost, access, or simply not knowing where to start.
Sim racing changed that equation, and LOR exists to help drivers make the most of it. We don't claim to have all the answers, but we do have time on real circuits — and the contacts, lessons, and mistakes that come with it. That's what we try to share.
The Pathway
From a first lap on a simulator to a real race seat. Each step is designed to build on the last, at the driver's own pace.
The Real Side
Talent identification is just the start. The trickier part is what happens when a driver is ready to step away from the simulator. We try to help with that — drawing on what our founders learned the slow way.
01
Test days and race entries through LOR Racing, our sister karting team. A first taste of real g-loads, tyre behaviour, and race-day pressure.
02
For drivers who are ready, we help open conversations with regional GT programmes through the relationships we've built over the years.
03
Honest, practical guidance from people who've raced in the region — covering racecraft, weekend management, working with engineers, and finding sponsors.
04
Motorsport isn't cheap, and we won't pretend otherwise. What we can do is help drivers think through the right series, the right team, and the right timing.
Why We Do This
Sim racing has opened up motorsport in a way nothing else has, and that's something we care about. A sim title is a real achievement — and for some drivers, it can also be the start of something bigger. If we can help a few more racers find their way onto a real circuit because of what we've learned, that's a good day at the office.