2025 FIA F4 Global Esports Championship Presented by MOZA | Race Preview | Races 5 & 6
November 21st, 2025 by Justin Melillo
The FIA F4 Global Esports Championship Presented by MOZA enters the second half of the 2025 season this weekend. The next two races of the year are scheduled for Saturday, November 22nd. 39 top-ranked competitors from a trio of competing regions will go against one another in the four-event, eight race season, battling for their chance at winning a share of the $35,000 prize pool. Up until now, the tracks that they’ll be racing at this weekend have not yet been revealed.
During a 12-week period in 2025 iRacing Season 3, three representing regions (Americas, Asia-Pacific, and Europe) determined 10 of their best drivers through an iRacing official series points competition. Each region sends forth their top-10 eligible drivers from the final points, plus the top-three drivers from each region in last year’s competition were also invited back, which makes up the 39-driver global grid.
This official iRacing series features fixed setup racing through all eight races, and the schedule is kept locked away until the day before that particular race.
Next up in the 2025 FIA F4 Global Esports Championship Presented by MOZA season…
WEATHERTECH RACEWAY LAGUNA SECA
-AND-
FUJI INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAYTune in tomorrow at 2pm ET / 19:00 GMT / 05:00 AEST
📺https://t.co/3zRHcs9p4N@fia | @moza_racing pic.twitter.com/E1mK7C4LnC
— iRacing (@iRacing) November 21, 2025
This weekend, the two tracks that the series will race on are WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca (Race #5) and Fuji International Speedway (Race #6). As planned, the remaining two races on the calendar will stay hidden until the day before those races.
EVENT FORMAT
With two races on the docket, drivers will need to be ready to jump from track to track on race day. The first race event will feature 15 minutes of practice, 10 minutes of qualifying, and a 15 minute race. After a five minute break following the conclusion to the first race, the second will feature a 10-minute practice, another 10-minute qualifying session, and another 15 minute feature race.
Each winner will collect 25 points toward the championship, with points being awarded to the top-15 finishing drivers, the last of which will receive one point.
LAST RACES
Two weeks ago, the FIA F4 Global Esports Championship Presented by MOZA took to Suzuka and the Red Bull Ring for the third and fourth race of the 2025 season. While the races were in virtual Japan and virtual Austria, it was Spain claiming both victories with Alejandro Sánchez taking Suzuka and Aaron Vazquez winning at Suzuka. Vazquez takes over the points lead at the halfway point, but it is still anyone’s championship to win or lose.
LAGUNA SECA TRACK FACTS
WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca is one of the classic North American road-racing circuits. A serpentine ribbon of pavement winding through the hills of Northern California’s Monterey Peninsula, “Laguna” is the site of one of the most unique and famous corners in motorsport – The Corkscrew. Approached from a long, fast uphill run, the Corkscrew is a blind, plunging lefthander that is more akin to a ski slope than a piece of race track.
Since 1957, WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca has served as one of the United States’ premier road racing facilities. Currently home to INDYCAR, IMSA, MotoAmerica, and vintage events. The track began to take its current shape in 1988 when the long straightaway between its former Turns 2 and 3 was replaced with a new infield section that includes the famous Andretti Hairpin.
FUJI SPEEDWAY TRACK FACTS
First opened in 1965, Fuji Speedway has undergone numerous reconfigurations to get to its current layout. The fifth and most recent design, authored by the internationally recognized Hermann Tilke, clocks in at 2.835 miles (4.563 km) and features 16 turns. Its frontstretch is responsible for nearly a mile of that length, forcing drivers to push for top speed coming off of the final corner, Panasonic, before diving into Turn 1.
Since 1967, Fuji Speedway has been a frequent host of prominent endurance races, starting with the Fuji 1000 km that year and evolving into the Fuji 6 Hours in 2012. The track hosted its first Japanese Grand Prix in 1976, and the event returned in 1977, 2007, and 2008. The track has also been a longtime staple of the Japanese national GT and formula series calendars, and its application has been so diverse that it even played host to cycling in the 2020 Summer Olympics.
HOW TO WATCH
Every round of the 2025 FIA F4 Global Esports Championship Presented by MOZA will be broadcasted on all of iRacing’s official channels.
Coverage starts at 2:00 pm ET / 19:00 GMT / 05:00 AEST.
For more information on the FIA F4 Global Esports Championship, visit www.iracing.com/fia-f4-esports/.
To learn more about the partnership between iRacing and the FIA, visit www.FIA.com/iracing.
For more information about MOZA Racing, visit www.mozaracing.com.
For more information about iRacing and for special offers, visit www.iracing.com.













































