Formula 1: Infinite Simulation Mode

Chapter 44: SIMEX Phase 2; Suzuka Circuit II

Formula 1: Infinite Simulation Mode

Chapter 44: SIMEX Phase 2; Suzuka Circuit II

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Chapter 44: SIMEX Phase 2; Suzuka Circuit II

"Monaco was street circuit geometry," Leo muttered to himself, his voice sounding thin against the roar of the simulated rain. "Narrow. Slow average speed. Every mistake was about hitting a wall. Suzuka has flowing corners at real speed. The information coming through the car is different. The volume is higher."

He sat at the starting grid of the Suzuka Circuit, his hands gripping the wheel of the virtual Arcadia car. Inside the neural link, it was a dark, relentless monsoon.

In Monaco, he had learned to memorize the barriers. He knew exactly where the metal guardrails sat, and he could calculate his distance from them down to the millimeter.

But Suzuka wasn’t about barriers. It was about the ground itself. Here, he had to feel the weight of the car as it shifted across the suspension. He had to listen to the tires. Not with his ears, but with his skin.

The Simex interface flickered in his vision, displaying a comparative analysis.

---

[SIMEX SYSTEM, LAP 4 ANALYSIS:]

[Circuit comparison, SUZUKA vs MONACO:]

[Average corner speed: +47%]

[Lateral load frequency: +63%]

[Required input precision: ELEVATED]

[Danger Sense activation frequency: +38% per lap vs Phase 1 average]

[Note: Phase 1 skills are functional. Phase 2 requires their integration at higher input volume.]

[You built the tools in Monaco. Suzuka will teach you to use them faster.]

---

Leo read the text, his eyes narrowing behind his visor. "Faster," he thought. "The tools need to run at higher frequency."

He thought about the "Racing Instinct" framework. During the final, desperate laps of the Monaco rankings, it had reached a 7% synchronization level.

Since returning to the real world, he had felt its lingering effects, a strange, sharp clarity where he could see the flight paths of birds or the way air moved around a closing door. But in the real world, it was just a curiosity. Here, it was his life support.

"7%," he whispered, his thumb hovering over the throttle paddle. "What does 8% feel like?"

He pressed the pedal.

The car lunged forward into the mist. Lap four became a symphony of near-misses. He dove into the First Curve, the car screaming as the downforce tried to pin it to the wet tarmac.

He survived the S-Curves, his hands moving with a frantic, blurred speed. It wasn’t conscious thought anymore. His brain wasn’t directing his muscles; the framework was. 𝑓𝘳𝑒𝑒𝓌𝘦𝘣𝘯ℴ𝑣𝘦𝑙.𝘤𝑜𝑚

He cleared the Degner curves, the car bottoming out with a shower of digital sparks. He navigated the Hairpin by trail-braking so deep that the car was practically sideways on entry.

He found a tiny pocket of grip on the inside kerb, a sliver of traction no wider than a finger, and used it to catapult the car toward the back of the circuit.

He reached the Spoon curve, the long, sweeping left-hander that defined the second sector. It was a corner that loaded the right-front tire in a way that was specific to Suzuka.

It was a test of endurance for the rubber and the driver’s neck muscles. He was halfway through the first part of the arc when the rain intensified.

It wasn’t a gradual increase. The simulation dialed the precipitation upward in a sharp step. The grey mist turned into a wall of white water.

The surface of the track disappeared under a film of standing water across the exit of Spoon. It was a trap, placed with the specific targeting precision that Leo now recognized as the AI’s signature.

"It’s hunting the corner I just confirmed," he realized.

He adjusted his steering, trying to find a drier line, but the change in grip was too sudden. The right-rear tire stepped out on the standing water at the exit. The car rotated forty degrees in a heartbeat.

In Monaco, a forty-degree rotation at high speed was a death sentence. It was a guaranteed reset. But as the car began to spin toward the grass, something clicked at the base of Leo’s skull.

It wasn’t a thought or a plan per se. It was a physical sensation, like a gear finally slipping into place after grinding for hours.

Danger Sense fired. It wasn’t a warning this time; it was a command.

His hands moved before he could even process the spin. He threw the wheel to the right, catching the slide at the exact moment the momentum tried to take over.

He modulated the throttle, a series of micro-taps that kept the engine revs from spiking. He was fighting the laws of physics in real-time.

He caught it.

The car was sideways, skimming the edge of the grass at 160 kilometers per hour, but the nose was pointing back toward the track.

However, forty degrees of rotation at that speed left no margin for the edge of the circuit. The rear-left corner of the wing clipped the barrier.

It was a light touch. A mere graze. But the Simex system was merciless.

The x500 penalty hit him. It wasn’t the crushing, bone-breaking explosion of a head-on collision, but it was a sharp, stinging vibration that shot up his arms and made his teeth ache. His vision flickered red.

Grid. Reset. Zero.

Leo didn’t curse. He didn’t even look at the lap counter. He sat in the silence of the grid, his heart hammering against his ribs like a trapped bird. His breathing was heavy, echoing inside his helmet.

"I caught it," he said, his voice trembling with a mix of exhaustion and a dark, rising excitement. "Forty degrees at that speed. In Monaco, I wouldn’t have caught twenty. The framework is running faster. I didn’t choose to catch that. The framework caught it."

He looked down at the steering wheel. He could almost feel the 8% now. He just needed a little more push. It was a subtle, electric hum in his nerves, a sense that the delay between the car’s movement and his reaction was shrinking toward zero. The "lag" of being human was being patched out of his system.

Suzuka wasn’t just a track. It was a laboratory. It was designed to force his brain to process more data, more quickly, until the "Racing Instinct" became his primary mode of existence.

The AI wanted him to stop being a man who drives just for the sake of it and start being a part of the machine.

He thought about the Ghost Drivers waiting for him at lap 901. If they had been watching his Phase 1 performance, they were expecting a driver who mastered narrow streets and slow corners.

They were expecting a technician who had learned to survive. They weren’t expecting a monster that could dance with a car at 200 kilometers per hour in a monsoon.

"Again," Leo said.

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