Man, Monaco in F1 Manager 23 kicked my butt last week. Pure frustration. My drivers couldn’t turn the thing properly, always smashing into walls or crawling through sections like it was raining molasses. I felt like an idiot, genuinely. Kept thinking, “This shouldn’t be this hard!” So, I decided enough was enough – time to dig in and figure this out myself.
The Pain Was Real (And Slow)
Started where I usually start for street circuits: slammed the ride height down low, stiffened the suspension thinking, “Yeah, that’ll make it agile.” Spoiler: It didn’t. The car just bounced around like crazy over the curbs at Sainte Devote and the Swimming Pool chicane. My drivers were losing seconds just trying to keep it on the track. Looked awful on the telemetry, like jagged mountains of frustration.
Then I tried messing with the wings. High downforce everywhere, right? More spoiler action. Sure, they glued themselves to Mirabeau, but as soon as they hit the tunnel exit and Casino Square? Snail pace. Crawling. Getting murdered on the straights felt embarrassing. Pit wall radio complaints skyrocketed – my engineers sounded done with me.

Hitting The Research Wall (Literally)
By Thursday, my practice sessions were a running joke. Car parts flying everywhere. My virtual budget screamed. That’s when I swallowed my pride and started actually looking into why Monaco is such a beast. Not just the obvious stuff, but the tiny details people who win here talk about.
Turns out, I was making fundamental dumb mistakes:
- Ride Height Ain’t Just About Looks: You need that car high enough to survive the bumpy parts. Letting it scrape the floor constantly? Bad idea. Losing downforce and speed every time you hit a curb? Yeah, I did that.
- Downforce Isn’t “All Or Nothing”: Monaco needs grip, yeah, but the few fast bits matter. Running max downforce everywhere strangles the engine. I needed a smarter split.
- Suspension Needs Forgiveness: Bone-jarringly stiff suspension? On a circuit paved by drunken goats? My car couldn’t absorb anything. It just skipped over bumps, lost tire contact, ruined tire life… it was a mess.
- Tire Wear Is Murder: Because you slide so much around every single corner, tires cook incredibly fast. My strategy was usually garbage, ignoring how fast the rubber died.
The Lightbulb Moment & My Fixes
After banging my head against the virtual wall (and a few real-life sighs), I started adjusting things step-by-step, testing meticulously:
- Raised the Ride Height: Just a tick. Enough to stop the constant scraping but keep the center of gravity low. Felt counterintuitive, but the car stopped hopping like a kangaroo.
- Fine-Tuned the Wings: Went higher on the front wing angle than the rear. Sounds weird? It works. Gives you the pointiness for the tight turns like Loews and Rascasse without absolutely killing you on the way to Beau Rivage.
- Softened the Suspension (a bit!): Made it more absorbent. Especially the slow-speed damper settings. Car felt less jittery, tires stayed planted over curbs instead of bouncing off. Less panic moments.
- Aggressive Brake Bias Forward: Helps the car turn in sharply when you hit the brakes entering corners like Mirabeau and Portier. Less understeer wrestling.
- Conservative Tire Strategy: Planned for serious wear. Pushed mediums as long as possible, pit late. Softs? Only if desperate. Saved sets for qualifying unless race pace demanded otherwise.
From Last Laugh To Victory
This wasn’t an overnight fix. Took probably six dedicated practice sessions – tweak, run 5 laps, check telemetry, swear, tweak again. But finally, clicking through qualifying, seeing the car stable through the tunnel exit, watching sector times tumble? Pure relief.
The race itself felt… controllable. Still intense, don’t get me wrong. Monaco is crazy. But knowing the car wouldn’t randomly launch itself into the barriers at the Nouvelle Chicane? Priceless. We managed pace, preserved tires decently, made smart calls. Crossed the line P2 and P4. After DNFs the week before? That felt like winning the damn lottery.
So yeah, Monaco demands respect. Not brute force, but precise, careful adjustments based on its unique stupidly narrow, bumpy nightmare reality. My initial setups were garbage, but grinding through the failures? That’s where the real knowledge landed. Hope this saves someone else a weekend of yelling at their monitor!