
Long-haul truck drivers spend grueling hours on the road, and when traffic grinds to a halt at night, the boredom is almost unbearable. But one driver found the ultimate solution: he ripped out his passenger seat and installed a $6,000 USD racing simulator (approximately RM26,700 / HK$46,800 / NT$190,000). Now when congestion hits, he’s not stuck watching the taillights ahead — he’s racing virtual circuits.

Work Driving, Then “Work Driving” — Is That Weird?
The driver, known as ZanaZamora, told interviewers: “Honestly, it’s absolutely worth it. And in a truck environment, the value I’m getting exceeds what I expected. Sim racing is incredibly engaging — it’s a hobby where you can always improve, always chase better lap times.” Some might find it odd to spend the day driving a truck and then spend the evening virtually driving more, but ZanaZamora sees it differently. He compares it to a gaming journalist who writes about games all day and then plays games at night — he’s not going to criticize someone for blending work and passion.

Is $6,000 USD Worth It?
Six thousand dollars isn’t pocket change for most people, but for a driver who spends 10+ hours a day in the cab, if the simulator makes traffic jams bearable — even enjoyable — the investment may genuinely pay off. For ZanaZamora, it’s not just killing time; it’s transforming those long, monotonous highway stretches into something more fulfilling. While others curse at gridlock, he can say: “Sorry, I’m on my 34th practice lap right now.”
This setup highlights a broader trend: professional drivers and mobile workers are rethinking how to use downtime productively. Whether it’s gaming, remote work, or creative hobbies, the cab is becoming a mobile studio. For ZanaZamora, those hours stuck in traffic are now his racing time — and that shift in perspective may be the real return on investment, far beyond the hardware itself.