2025 FIA F4 Global Esports Championship Presented by MOZA | Race Preview | Races 7 & 8
December 5th, 2025 by Justin Melillo
The FIA F4 Global Esports Championship Presented by MOZA is set to conclude the 2025 season this weekend. The final two races of the year are scheduled for Saturday, December 6th. 39 top-ranked competitors from a trio of competing regions have gone against one another in this four-event, eight race season, battling for their chance at winning a share of the $35,000 prize pool. After six races, 12 drivers still remain with a mathematical shot at the title, but the top-three are within seven points entering Round 7.
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 sent 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 to make up the 39-driver global grid.
This official iRacing series features fixed setup racing through all eight races, and throughout the season, the schedule of tracks were kept locked away until the day before those particular races.
This is it.
The title is on the line.The venues that these FIA F4 Global Esports Championship presented by MOZA drivers will compete at are…
BRANDS HATCH & PORTLAND!
Tune in tomorrow at 2 pm ET / 19:00 GMT / 05:00 AEST
📺https://t.co/3zRHcs9p4N@fia | @moza_racing pic.twitter.com/ZcpXi43AHY— iRacing (@iRacing) December 5, 2025
Henry Moore (United Kingdom) and Aaron Vazquez (Spain) enter the finale tied at the top of the standings, with Moore having two wins collected versus Vazquez’s one. Dan Amor (United Kingdom) sits third in the points, seven behind the leaders. From Alejandro Sánchez (Spain) in fourth down to Pablo Espes (Spain) in 12th, are also still mathematically eligible if the leaders don’t score points in the final two races.
Concluding the championship season this weekend, the final two tracks that the series will race on are Brands Hatch (Race #7) and Portland International Raceway (Race #8).
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 championship honed in on the competitors that would ultimately fight for the title through battles at Laguna Seca and Fuji Speedway. In the opening race of the day, Henry Moore returned to victory lane, holding off Dan Amor in the closing laps to become the first multi-time winner on the season. Moore looked to sweep the day at Fuji, grabbing a second pole position, but was met with the losing end of a photo finish against Elvis Rankin (United States) at the line. The results set up a tie at the top of the standings with Moore and Vazquez, with Amor just seven back entering the final two races.
BRANDS HATCH TRACK FACTS
Situated some 30 miles southeast of London, Brands Hatch was the scene of motorcycle events in the 1920s on a three quarter mile dirt track carved out of a forested bowl that continues to be a distinguishing feature of the facility. Following World War II the oval was paved and modified to include the Druids Bend hairpin. With the construction of permanent pit facilities, Brands Hatch became one of England’s major motorsports venues. The facility was further enhanced in 1959 with the addition of more than a mile of track that brought the full circuit to 2.3 miles in length, with the original track serving as the nucleus for today’s club course known as the “Indy Circuit.”
Brands Hatch hosted its first major international race in 1960, when Jack Brabham won the non-championship Silver City Trophy Formula One race, and was selected as the site of the British Grand Prix four years later. Subsequently, Brands Hatch alternated with Silverstone as the home of the British Grand Prix, producing many noteworthy winners from Jim Clark to Niki Lauda and Alan Jones. The track was the site of Nigel Mansell’s first F1 win as well as the most recent win by an F1 privateer, when Jo Siffert drove Rob Walker Racing’s Lotus/Ford to victory in 1968.
PORTLAND TRACK FACTS
Opening in 1961, Portland International Raceway has become the Pacific Northwest’s premier racing venue. The track has boasted many of America’s top road racing series, from the classic years of the SCCA Trans-Am Series to CART from 1984 to 2007. It currently features events for the IndyCar Series, NASCAR Xfinity Series, ARCA Menards Series, and the Trans-Am West Coast Championship.
Portland’s Grand Prix layout clocks in at 12 turns and just under two miles. The track’s long front straightaway is broken up by the Shelton Chicane, initiated by a hard right-hand turn that can cause chaos with unprepared drivers at the start of a race. The mixed-surface layout, featuring a split of asphalt and concrete, can see drivers in top-level classes turn laps of under a minute.
HOW TO WATCH
The final 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.












































