HELP LAUNCH
Guy’s Live Window to the World
PHOTO: ANNA SUSLOVA / @ANNASUSSLOVA
GOLDEN GLOBE RACE 2026 LIVE WINDOW
The First-Ever Modern View into a Retro Race
For the first time in Golden Globe Race history, audiences will have the opportunity to see a one-way live view from aboard select competitors’ boats at scheduled intervals during the race.
Onboard race footage is normally held by the race organizer until after the Prize Giving, meaning supporters would otherwise have to wait until at least late 2027 to see life aboard. The GGR Live Window changes that completely—offering scheduled one-way live views of the circumnavigation—as it unfolds.
Only seven skippers will carry this system onboard and Guy needs your support to be one of them.
Help bring the first-ever GGR Live Window aboard Spirit and watch Guy race around the world!
Click below to support the effort—in order to move forward, we must raise the funds to cover the hardware, installation, and related fees before the start of the race. We’re in the final countdown; each and every contribution helps!
GGR LIVE WINDOW SPECIFICATIONS
REGULAR 2-3 HOUR SEGMENTS
Live transmission from participating boats on a rotating schedule
MULTI-VIEW WITH 3 CAMERAS
Positioned in the cockpit, below-deck, and a mobile/action views
CAMERA FEATURES
Gyro-stabilized, infrared night vision, auto-tracking & audio feed
DATA DASHBOARD
Overlay with GPS coordinates, key boat metrics & race news feed for viewers
WE WILL BE ABLE TO SEE GUY, BUT HE WON’T BE ABLE TO SEE US
Stand Watch From Shore
The GGR Live Window does not change the race for the sailor: there are no screens, no computers and no incoming data for the skipper. The streaming system is a one-way broadcast device—not a communication tool.
Guy cannot see viewers, hear viewers, or receive messages. He is still not allowed to have any coaching, routing, weather information, or outside help.
This is a chance to experience the race in a way that has never been possible before—and to come together in support of Guy’s attempt at an American first.