Gran Turismo 7 announces June 11 “Hypercar Update”
Gran Turismo 7 has announced a June 11 “Hypercar Update” adding four current WEC Hypercar-class prototypes plus the official WEC safety car.
We’ve got an announcement for Gran Turismo 7’s next content drop: the “Hypercar Update” is scheduled for June 11 and centers on current FIA WEC top-class machinery. According to the announcement coverage, the update will add four Hypercar prototypes and the official WEC safety car.
What changed
Cars
- Porsche 963 joins the game as one of the new Hypercar entries. The source identifies it as an LMDh prototype using a twin-turbo 4.6-liter V8 with the spec Bosch/Williams hybrid system.
- Peugeot 9X8 is also included. The source describes it as an LMH car with a twin-turbo 2.6-liter V6 driving the rear axle and a hybrid system powering the front axle.
- Ferrari 499P arrives as another LMH entry, with a twin-turbo 3.0-liter V6 driving the rear wheels and hybrid power to the front.
- BMW M Hybrid V8 completes the prototype set. The source lists it as an LMDh car built around the shared Bosch/Williams hybrid package and powered by BMW’s twin-turbo 4.0-liter V8.
- The update also adds the official WEC safety car, a 992-generation Porsche 911 in series livery.
Timing
- The “Hypercar Update” is scheduled to arrive on Thursday, June 11.
We should decide now whether to build a Hypercar class, prep one-off multiclass-style events, or wait for in-game performance details before locking schedules and regulations.
From the changelog
Structured change list parsed from the official notes.
cars
- The first day of the GT World Series 2026 Milan round hadn’t even started its main events before Polyphony dropped a sizeable piece of news: a “Hypercar Update” is on the way next month (Thursday, June 11), and it brings four of the current WEC Hypercar-class prototypes into GT7 alongside the official WEC safety car.
- The four headline cars cover all four of the major manufacturer flavors of the current top class (two LMDh entries and two LMH entries), which is about as complete a snapshot of the category as you can get in a single update.
- The 963 is Porsche’s LMDh challenger, built on the Multimatic chassis. It runs a twin-turbo 4.6-litre V8 paired with the spec Bosch/Williams hybrid system common to all LMDh cars.
- Worth noting: Porsche has confirmed it is ending its works WEC Hypercar programme, so the 963 enters GT7 just as it departs the world stage in Europe. It will continue racing in IMSA, and the customer 963s have been a fixture of the WEC’s privateer entries, including the JOTA cars that took the FIA World Cup for Hypercar Teams.
- The 9X8 is the most unconventional of the trio, both visually and mechanically. It debuted as the “wingless” Hypercar, with Peugeot initially designing it to run without a rear wing before a major evolution added one and fundamentally revised the aero package. As an LMH car, its hybrid system powers the front axle while a twin‑turbo 2.6‑litre V6 drives the rear, giving it four‑wheel drive when the hybrid is active.
- On track, the 9X8’s WEC career has been turbulent, with outright victories proving elusive and performance heavily dependent on circuit and Balance of Performance, even though it has managed a handful of podium finishes. It remains a fascinating car to drive on its own terms, and its radically different concept makes it a particularly distinctive addition to GT7 ’s Hypercar grid.
- The 499P is the car of the moment. Ferrari’s return to the top class of Le Mans produced a win on debut, and the 499P has now taken multiple consecutive 24 Hours of Le Mans victories, including a recent win for the privateer #83 AF Corse car.
- Mechanically it’s an LMH like the Peugeot, with a twin-turbo 3.0-litre V6 driving the rear wheels and the hybrid system feeding the fronts. Of the four headline cars in this update, the 499P arrives in GT7 with by far the strongest real-world resume.
- The M Hybrid V8 is BMW’s first top-class prototype since the V12 LMR won Le Mans in 1999. Like the Porsche, it’s an LMDh, sharing the Dallara chassis platform used by Cadillac and built around the same Bosch/Williams hybrid spec. The engine is BMW’s own twin-turbo 4.0-litre V8, derived from DTM-era racing hardware.
- BMW topped Manufacturers Cup qualifying for the second year running in the virtual world, so the timing of its real-world Hypercar entering GT7 alongside a Milan-hosted GTWS round dominated by BMW in sim form is a nice piece of symmetry.
- Rounding out the five-car set is the official WEC safety car, a 992-generation Porsche 911 in full series livery.
- It’s a fitting companion piece to the four prototypes, since it’s the same car that paces the real-world WEC field, now sitting in the GT7 garage alongside the cars it leads. It also gives Porsche fans a second entry in this update by default, even with the 963 already on the list.
Official sources
Running a Gran Turismo 7 league?
Racey automates signups, stewarding & standings — so you run the racing, not the spreadsheets.
Get started free →More Gran Turismo 7 updates
Gran Turismo 7 update 1.70 adds five cars, new Gr.1 races, and a Fishermans Ranch reverse Circuit Experience
GT7 version 1.70 brings five new cars, five World Circuits events, a new Circuit Experience at Fishermans Ranch reverse, an Extra Menu focused on 2016 LMP1 hybrids, a time-limited Seasonal Menu, five engine swaps, and other feature updates including a new Sport Mode opening movie.
Gran Turismo 7 confirms June 11 hypercar-themed update
Gran Turismo 7’s June 11 update is confirmed with five new cars, new race events, Extra Menu 54, a Seasonal Menu, and a new Scapes location.
Gran Turismo 7 update 1.69 adds 3 cars, 3 races, Nurburgring reverse Circuit Experience, and Power Pack challenge changes
GT7 patch 1.69 introduces three new cars, three World Circuits events, a new Circuit Experience on Nurburgring Endurance II reverse, and feature updates including Power Pack Challenges, a new Extra Menu, a returning Seasonal Menu, new engine swaps, and a Scapes vertical camera adjustment curation.