Redline took the race lead after the restart, trading places with the Veloce car, but then they too encountered issues. First Max Verstappen crashed heavily after losing connection, then team-mate Kerkhof also had connection issues, and the team retired the car. A second red flag in the latter half of the race allowed them to rejoin, but again too far down to make a difference.
That handed the lead to the Rebellion-Williams of Louis Deletraz, Raffaele Marciello, Nikodem Wisniewski, and Kuba Brzezinski, and for the final 12 hours the team barely looked back. Thanks to an alternate pit strategy, the ByKolles car seemed to be back in contention, but with a second Rebellion-Williams acting as a wingman the team was able to hold off the challenge.
Jernej Simoncic was quick in the final stints in the ByKolles, but finished second. Wisniewski took the win for Rebellion-Williams by a margin of just 18 seconds, and even appeared to run out of fuel on the cool down lap.
The racing in GTE was much more straightforward, with the pole-sitting #93 Porsche almost taking a lights-to-flag victory. Porsche took the first four places on the grid, and the Porsche team itself was on for a 1-2-3 but for driver change issues. The #93 of Nick Tandy, Ayhancan Guven, Josh Rogers, and Tommy Ostgaard took victory by over a lap from the Aston Martin of Richard Westbrook, Nicki Thiim, Lasse Sorensen, and Manuel Biancolilla. That also meant that Tandy is the only driver in the field to have won both the real and virtual races.