The MotoGP 2027 grid is hardly filled officially, seemingly as a consequence of the ongoing contract negotiations between manufacturers and the series itself. Unofficially, though, most of the dominoes are in place - and fewer and fewer options appear to be realistically on the table.
We cannot guarantee that all the various handshake deals and pre-contracts and whatnot will definitely come to fruition - and there is still the question of Marc Marquez's fitness. Marquez is set to stay at Ducati but sounds like he still needs to prove to himself that he will be fit enough to make continuing worth his while.
But it's trending the right way. And as for the rest, right now the intrigue over MotoGP '27 appears to concentrate around a select handful satellite seats.
The intrigue level is super high. Ahead of a switch to 850cc bikes and Pirelli tyres, the grid will be refreshed in a big way - and some very familiar names face a very real (and, for some of them, very sudden) prospect of leaving a series they had seemed to well-established in.
As the '27 grid approaches its final shape, here are the biggest questions on the current agenda, barring any massive last-second twists.
Does Raul Fernandez have a 2027 plan?
If Fernandez's future does lie outside of Trackhouse, it is not currently obvious what his alternative would be. KTM satellite team Tech3 has been floated as one serious possibility - by Ricard Jove, Spanish pundit and former manager for current Tech3 rider Maverick Vinales - but Fernandez's previous stint with KTM had ended on a very, very sour note.
What is clear, however, is that Vinales is a question mark.
Moto2 frontrunner Senna Agius is widely seen as the favourite for a Tech3 seat - and team chief Guenther Steiner confirmed at Mugello that Tech3 was "pretty open" on taking a rookie from Moto2.
"I think this is an opportunity for us - because, a team like us, we cannot get Marc, we cannot get Bezzecchi, we cannot get them. That's reality.
"I mean, I cannot get around that. Obviously we need experience, but you can mix it up, experience and take the chance on somebody who could be the next star, you know? Maybe a big team cannot take chances - we can.
"But what I learned [in F1] as well, if you take a rookie, you need to put him in a position that he can develop and [you] get the best out of him - it's pairing him with an experienced rider. I would not put two rookies in a team."
Steiner talked up the importance of an experienced "reference", and Vinales would certainly qualify. And it helps that there's an easy contractual mechanism - in the form of a KTM-side option - to keep him in place.
But Vinales has not been truly fit since Sachsenring last year. This has already cost him a promotion to the factory KTM team.
Vinales said when asked by The Race that his target was still being at 100% fitness as early as Brno - and insisted that "the shoulder will be good". His position is that he doesn't need "to convince nobody" that he will be fit again.
"I think, when I was OK in KTM, in that moment I was the leader. And then OK, I got injured - but I was in the Red Bull Athlete Performance Center, they agreed that I will recover 100%.
"Obviously it's not easy because it's seven months that I don't use some muscles - it needs a bit of time. But what is clear is that I'm going to recover 100%. The biggest question was that one, if after the second operation I was able to recover - but I am able."
But Steiner had told media at Mugello that he needed to see Vinales get fit, and that Tech3 was in no rush to make any commitments.
"I'm very calm about it - because most of the teams have signed their riders! Our candidates have nowhere to go, to be honest. When you're the last one in the draft, the draft is yours."
What roster shape does Honda prefer?
Riders who hope to continue will be phased out from MotoGP against their wishes. This much is clear - the only question is the exact names and the total number.
The aforementioned Vinales and Fernandez are in the danger zone, as are the likes of Luca Marini, Franco Morbidelli, Alex Rins, Jack Miller, Brad Binder.
Of those, Morbidelli and Rins both confirmed that they are not yet ready to give up on continuing in MotoGP - and Marini claimed that the full make-up of the premier class grid should still take some time to sort out, even if only a few seats are still available.
But can anyone 'fold' now and secure a potential championship-winning move?
MotoGP is expecting up to five rookies from Moto2 to step up next year, but it is also expecting the arrival of World Superbike dominator Nicolo Bulega as a VR46 Ducati rider.
Bulega has won 22 races in a row. His team-mate Iker Lecuona - who is in MotoGP this weekend as injury stand-in for Alex Marquez - has made it 15 successive WorldSBK 1-2s for the factory Ducati team. Even if a tyre change is coming to WorldSBK next year (Pirelli-to-Michelin, the opposite to the move MotoGP will make), you would be extremely brave to bet on anyone but Ducati.
The seat that Bulega is set to vacate is not thought likely to be particularly lucrative - financially. But it could drown a frustrated MotoGP rider in silverware, and there's no shortage of frustrated MotoGP riders right now who are likelier than not to be left off the MotoGP grid in '27.
Rumoured 2027 grid
Ducati: Marc Marquez - Pedro Acosta
VR46 Ducati: Fermin Aldeguer - Nicolo Bulega
Gresini Ducati: Joan Mir - Dani Holgado
Aprilia: Marco Bezzecchi - Pecco Bagnaia
Trackhouse Aprilia: Enea Bastianini - Manu Gonzalez
KTM: Alex Marquez - Fabio Di Giannantonio
Tech3 KTM: Senna Agius - ?
Honda: Fabio Quartararo - David Alonso
LCR Honda: Diogo Moreira - Johann Zarco
Yamaha: Jorge Martin - Ai Ogura
Pramac Yamaha: Toprak Razgatlioglu - Izan Guevara