COVID-19 Pushes Drone Racing Onto Screens: DRL Goes Fully Virtual for New Season

The Drone Racing League launched a new season today, October 21, 2020, held entirely inside a virtual simulator, broadcast on NBCSN, Twitter and Facebook Watch in 50 countries. Twelve top pilots are competing across 16 races within the DRL Simulator, and alongside the announcement the league also revealed its first game built for Xbox.
Why is COVID-19 forcing DRL to abandon physical tracks?
Drone racing typically demands a real track, a live crowd, and often an entire arena lit up with neon and packed with obstacles. In a year when all of that became impossible due to pandemic gathering restrictions, DRL chose not to cancel the season but to move it entirely into the digital arena. The result is the 2020 season, launching today as a fully virtual competition with not a single physical track in sight.
The league is using the DRL Simulator, an immersive racing game that accurately recreates the league's custom-built drones, the Racer4, flying at high speeds through neon-lit virtual courses. The format lets fans watch the competition from anywhere in the world, no longer tied to the geographic location of a single arena.
- Season launch date: October 21, 2020
- Broadcast platforms: NBCSN, Twitter, Facebook Watch
- Countries broadcasting: 50
- Number of competing pilots: 12
- Number of races this season: 16
- Competition arena: DRL Simulator
Are racing drones now coming to game consoles too?
Until now, the DRL Simulator was available mainly to PC players. With the launch of the virtual season, the league is announcing its first game built specifically for Xbox, a move that opens the door to a console audience far larger than anything previously exposed to competitive drone racing.
It's a logical commercial move: if the competition itself now exists solely inside a video game, expanding the potential player base is the clear way to grow the target audience and revenue potential, even if the real success of the move will only be measured as the season progresses.
Why are BODYARMOR, Champion and RESPAWN signing on as sponsors?
The virtual season isn't arriving without financial backing. DRL has signed sponsorship partnerships with three brands to support the new live racing season.
- BODYARMOR, a sports drink brand
- Champion Athleticwear, a sports apparel brand
- RESPAWN, a gaming furniture and equipment brand
The choice of sponsors from the gaming world alongside sports and energy drink brands hints at how DRL is currently positioning itself: not just as an extreme sports league, but as a hybrid gaming-sports product aiming to attract a young audience that consumes content through screens rather than from the stands.
Was the simulator already used to recruit real pilots before the pandemic?
The shift to a fully digital competition isn't a complete improvisation. DRL had already been using in-simulator performances before the pandemic forced the full move online, as a tool for identifying and recruiting pilots for real-world races. So the technological foundation underpinning the current season had already proven itself as a serious scouting tool, not merely a temporary emergency substitute.
The open question is how many of DRL's regular arena and TV viewers will stay loyal to a format where the entire competition takes place inside a video game, and how many will see it as just a temporary stand-in until physical tracks return. In the meantime, the league has chosen to bet that the broader gaming audience, including new Xbox console users, will make up for any viewer who misses the real roar of the Racer4 engine out in the field.
Isradrone Editorial Team
The Isradrone team covers drone technology, defense, mapping, agriculture and logistics innovation from around the world. Original, research-based reporting verified for the Israeli market.
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