Supercars Championship in video games

It featured real-life video from the Mount Panorama Circuit with the virtual cars superimposed over the top.

Players took part in a series of races around the Mount Panorama Circuit, with prize money being used to upgrade the car or change the team manager and pit crew.

It featured cars loosely based on the Ford AU Falcon and Holden VT Commodore that were used in V8 Supercars at the time.

In 2002, V8 Supercars: Race Driver, the fourth game in Codemasters' series, was released for the PlayStation 2, Xbox and Windows.

The final game in the series was V8 Supercars 3, which was released in 2006 for PlayStation 2, PSP, Nintendo DS, Xbox, Windows and Mac OS X and featured all cars and tracks from the 2005 season.

The 2015 edition, Forza Motorsport 6, featured ten V8 Supercars including all five marques that competed in the 2015 season.

In 2016, two cars from the newly renamed Supercars Championship and one car from the 2015 V8 Supercars Championship appeared in Forza Horizon 3, their first appearance in the spin-off series to Forza Motorsport, as part of a wider focus on Australian content.

[13] The inaugural event featured online competition with the winning entrants competing in a joint race against Supercars Championship drivers at the 2017 Supercheap Auto Bathurst 1000, in a similar concept seen to Formula E, and then a series of races to determine the outright winner.

[16] With iRacing in 2019 only featuring the older Ford FG Falcon and Holden VF Commodore models, superseded in the Supercars Championship in 2015 and 2018 respectively, plans were also launched to develop the contemporary Ford Mustang GT and Holden ZB Commodore into the game for 2020.

Fully licensed games have accurate cars (including liveries), drivers and or tracks from the Supercars Championship series.

DJR Team Penske carried Xbox and Forza Motorsport signage at selected events in 2014 and 2015.