The Drone Racing League Is Building an Insane New Sport
Drone pilots race one another around abandoned buildings and football stadiums in high-speed showdowns
Car racing leagues like NASCAR get lots of slack for being boring. For outsiders, it’s tough to see the fun in watching people drive in circles again and again — even if they’re doing it at 160 miles an hour within an inch of one another.
But what if the vehicles racing against one another weren’t cars, but flying robots? That’s the idea behind drone racing, where pilots twist, turn and flip their tiny aircraft around complex courses. All this, while their body stays put thanks to special goggles that deliver a first-person view from their drone’s camera.

For now, drone racing has a decidedly narrow audience. But Nicholas Horbaczewski, CEO of the Drone Racing League, sees a roadmap in the growth of competitive video gaming, estimated to generate nearly $2 billion in annual revenue by 2020. That industry makes money through sponsorships, advertising and ticket sales. “We look at what e-sports is doing and say, you know, there’s a lot of different ways this could evolve, there’s a lot of different business models for this,” says Horbaczewski.

“Right now, we need to develop the sport, we need to develop the technology, we need to build a fan base, make them aware of what’s going on, make them care about the pilots and the results,” says Horbaczewski. “I think once you’ve done that, there’s a lot of ways sports can evolve.”
Time.com
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