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I Drove a Real-Life BMW M2 on a Virtual Racetrack and Survived

eric stafford driving a bmw m2 on a virtual racetrack
Video: I Drove a Real BMW M2 on a Virtual TrackBMW
  • BMW's "M Mixed Reality" puts the user in a real car in a real environment and lets them drive on a digital racetrack.

  • Wearing a virtual reality (VR) headset and driving a real BMW M2, I got to try the brand's mixed-reality creation.

  • BMW debuted M Mixed Reality earlier this year, and the technology has huge potential as a driver-training device.

Driving a real car while wearing a virtual reality (VR) headset is almost always a terrible idea. I say almost always because there's a time when not only is it okay, but it's also a totally great (if surreal) experience. And I have the receipts—in the form of this video—to prove it.

BMW's Version of The Matrix

BMW calls its mind-bending creation "M Mixed Reality." It's basically a driving simulator, but instead of the typical stationary devices that display virtual racetracks and mimic real-world feedback, the mixed-reality experience lets users drive on a virtual racetrack in a real car in a real environment. In this case, it's the recently revealed 2023 BMW M2 at the brand's M Driving Academy in Maisach, Germany.

eric stafford driving a bmw m2 on a virtual racetrack
BMW

Wearing the VR headset while driving might look like a scene from the Sandra Bullock flick Bird Box, but I wasn't actually driving blind. The headset allowed me to see reality until the virtual part was mixed in. I also had BMW M engineer Alexander Kuttner riding shotgun, providing directions and guidance. Fortunately for Kuttner, he had a brake pedal on his side in case things went off the rails.

Virtual Track, Real Car, Real Consequences

What admittedly sounds like a questionable concept is actually super entertaining and largely accessible, as long as you're like me and don't suffer from motion sickness. Having logged countless hours playing racing video games as well as having prior VR experience also helped. Despite those advantages, it still took me a moment to get my bearings. Never before had I found myself wearing a bulky VR headset when sitting behind the wheel of a real car with 453 horsepower at the disposal of my right foot.

bmw m2 m mixed reality car
BMW

Once I was strapped into the safety harness in the M2's driver's seat and the VR headset was strapped to my skull, Kuttner directed me to follow a set of cones toward a designated spot on the runway of the old U.S. military base that BMW now uses for its driving academy. The flat asphalt surface and clear surroundings provided a perfect closed course, which is a necessity for this type of thing.