In GT6 you can really feel the car moving around underneath you, and if you put too much yaw or pitch into the car, it will react as it would in real life with a bit of a snap. "The game is quite similar to real life in that sense. The way the car pitches forwards on the brakes and yaws in the corners," says Mardenborough. "For me, the biggest similarities between virtual and reality is the way that you control the balance of the car. While Mardenborough started with virtual racing, he's now part of the Red Bull racing team and is being touted as a potential Formula One racer in the near future. The 2014 GT Academy has just started in Gran Turismo 6 with the first round of time trials, so we met up with 2011 winner Jann Mardenborough to talk about transferring his experience from the game into reality. The contest starts with a series of time trial events in the game, with the winners flown to Silverstone in England to take part in a reality TV show and racing driver bootcamp that determines which player will be put behind the wheel of a real racing car by Nissan. In 2008, Yamauchi's studio, Polyphony Digital, teamed up with Sony and Nissan to create GT Academy, a competition within the Gran Turismo games that gives winners a chance to become real racing drivers. Virtual racer turned real-life pro Jann Mardenborough. He has achieved this himself, racing for professional teams and winning at events like 24 Hours Nürburgring. Gran Turismo's game director, Kazunori Yamauchi, has long spoken about his desire to bridge the gap between racing simulations and real motorsport. However, there is a video game that is truly changing lives and giving a select few players the chance to live their wildest dreams for real. Many of us use video games as a form of escapism, as a chance to live out our dreams and fantasies, if only for a few hours in a virtual world.
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