The F76 is Ferrari’s First-ever Digital Hypercar
Created exclusively for the digital world in the form of an NFT, the Ferrari F76 celebrates the brand’s first ever victory at the 24 Hours of Le Mans
Oct 28, 2025
History was created 76 years ago, when Italian driver Luigi Chinetti drove a Ferrari 166 MM Barchetta to victory at the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1949. It was the first-ever Le Mans win for the brand from Maranello and marked the start of a legend that the Italian brand would create for itself over the years to come. To celebrate that first win, Ferrari has unveiled its first-ever digital hypercar, christened F76.
The completely out-of-the-box project blends Ferrari’s tremendous racing heritage with cutting-edge innovation in generative design and digital technologies. The result is a stunning new dimension to brand experience. Designed for clients of the exclusive Hyperclub programme, the F76 is one of the digital assets of the initiative created by the Maranello-based company to support the 499P competing at Le Mans and in the World Endurance Championship, allowing clients to experience this journey alongside the official team. The F76 project offered clients an unprecedented personalisation experience: each digital car was created by choosing from various design options, released as exclusive drops over the three years of the Hyperclub programme.
Visually, the F76 looks like no other Ferrari, either in the real world or virtual. What stands out is a unique double fuselage design that preserves the sanctity of airflow over the form. Wing profiles and geometries have been refined to enhance performance and stretch the boundaries of conventional norms. While the flanks feature F80-esque vertical cuts, the rear is characterised by two vertical profiles and the front is dominated by a band suspended between wings, taking the floating splitter idea seen in the F80 to the very extreme. Headlamps are retractable, referencing the Ferraris of the 1970s and ‘80s.
The interior is designed to enhance the shared driving experience: two separate cockpits, utilising drive-by-wire technology, synchronise every driving component, from the steering wheel to the pedals. This is meant to allow two occupants to experience and share sensations in real time.
The F76 has been created by the Ferrari Styling Centre led by Flavio Manzoni, and according to the Italian manufacturer, it indicates the shapes of future Ferraris. The idea is to redefine the limits of automotive design.