It is a classic result of Kan that the homotopy categories (with appropriate model structures) of simplicial sets and of topological spaces (in fact, one could only care about CW-complexes) are equivalent. One could ask if there is a similar result for G-equivariant homotopy category of spaces, where G is a topological group (usually a Lie group) and a morphism of G-spaces is a map, strictly commuting with G-action: $$f(gx) = g\cdot f(x)$$ Since the G-equivariant category admits a very nice theory of cell decompositions and in fact is equivalent to a homotopy category of space presheaves on the category of G-orbits (Elmendorf's theorem), one could guess that such a result should be true. However, I would like to see it not on the level of $\mathrm{SSet}$-presheaves on orbits, but rather directly in the standard definitions. I see 2 problems. Firstly, while cellular and simplicial descriptions of spaces are very similar, they are not equivalent in any sense I could see (besides giving the same homotopy category). The second problem is that if we pass from topological spaces to simplicial sets, we should also change a topological group into a simplicial group. While there is an obvious way to go back and forth (singular complex $\mathrm{Sing}: \mathrm{Top} \to \mathrm{SSet}$ and geometric realization $|\cdot|: \mathrm{SSet} \to \mathrm{Top}$), it is very unobvious that this gives the correct correspondence, since $X \to |\mathrm{Sing}X|$ is just a weak homotopy equivalence, and the equivariant category doesn't respect homotopy equivalences in general, both for spaces and groups. A contractible space can have different non-equivalent G-structures (e.g. free and trivial), and homotopy equivalent (as spaces) groups can give different equivariant categories.
So the question is, can we generalize Kan's theorem to the equivariant setting? If we do, then how does this correspondence look like and how far is it from the intuition? For example, are there finite-dimensional simplicial groups G, such that their G-homotopy categories are not equivalent to equivariant categories of Lie groups? Can we associate with a space $X$ some simplicial group $G_X$, such that the $G_X$-equivariant category is the same as fibrations over $X$?