Every GO setup for Assetto Corsa Competizione follows a standard naming convention. Understanding it lets you quickly identify exactly what each file is for.
The naming format
ACC setup names follow this structure:
GO [Game Version] [Car] [Class] [Track] [Type] [Variant] [Setup Version]
For example: GO 1.10.3 720SEVO GT3 BAR Q Esport V2
What each part means
GO identifies this as a GO Setups file.
Game Version (e.g. 1.10.3) is the ACC game version the setup was built for. This tells you whether the setup matches your current game version. If ACC has updated since, check for a newer setup version.
Car (e.g. 720SEVO) is the car model. Names are abbreviated: 720SEVO is the McLaren 720S Evo, M4 is the BMW M4 GT3, 296 is the Ferrari 296 GT3, and so on.
Class (e.g. GT3) is the car class. In ACC this is typically GT3, GT4, or CUP.
Track (e.g. BAR) is the track abbreviation. BAR is Barcelona, SPA is Spa-Francorchamps, SIL is Silverstone, and so on.
Type indicates whether the setup is for Qualifying (Q) or Race (R).
Variant describes the setup style. Common variants include Esport (maximum performance), Safe (more forgiving), Wet (optimised for rain), Hybrid (designed for changing conditions), LFM (adapted to LFM Balance of Performance), and UKOG LFM. For a full breakdown of all setup types, see What's Included in the ACC Bundles?.
Setup Version (e.g. V2) is the revision number. A higher number means a more recent update. Always use the latest version unless you specifically prefer an older one.
LFM-BOP setups
Setups built for the current LFM Balance of Performance include LFM in the name. For example: GO 1.10.3 M4 GT3 SUZ LFM Q. These are specifically tuned for LFM BOP restrictions and should only be used in LFM events.
Need help?
If you are still experiencing issues, check the Troubleshooting section for common solutions. If you cannot find what you are looking for, open a support ticket and our team will help you out.