On Saturday, Microsoft surprised Xbox fans with a brief but visually impressive in-engine trailer for Forza Horizon 6 that showcased the game’s various biomes. The footage demonstrated the excellent level of detail provided by the latest iteration of the ForzaTech proprietary engine technology, while also offering a glimpse of the variety of environments players will be able to explore from the cockpit of their cars once the game ships in less than three months. We can see beaches, small villages, forests, the countryside, and snowy, mountainous regions, among others.

Originally announced at Tokyo Game Show 2025, Forza Horizon 6 is the direct successor to 2021’s award-winning Forza Horizon 5, which was the biggest-ever launch for an Xbox Studios game and kept millions of players engaged for years, even adding a lot more racing fans to the community when it debuted on Sony’s PlayStation 5 console last year.

It won’t be easy for the new game to match or exceed its success, but developer Playground is certainly trying. The map is the franchise’s largest to date, with Tokyo confirmed as its most complex and intricate drivable space, being five times larger than any previous Horizon city. Tokyo’s rendition in Forza Horizon 6 features multiple districts, each with its own distinct identity, from suburbs and downtown areas to docks and industrial zones. Beyond the city, Mount Fuji and several other regions of Japan have been confirmed, spanning the Kantō, Chūbu, and Kansai areas. As usual with Forza Horizon games, these regions will be compressed into a fictional map rather than reflecting real-life distances.

Forza Horizon 6 will feature over 550 cars at launch, more than its predecessor but fewer than Forza Horizon 4, which had over 750 when it debuted in 2018. Similar to Forza Horizon 4 and 5, dynamic seasons return, with the team building a system that genuinely shifts the world’s tone, activity, and ambient sound as seasons change. Japan’s famous cherry blossoms, vivid autumn foliage, and snow-capped winter mountains should make the seasonal cycle particularly spectacular in this setting. Game developer Playground Games also brought on cultural consultant Kyoko Yamashita to ensure the game’s depiction of Japan feels authentic in every respect.

The most notable gameplay departure from previous entries that we know of will be found in campaign progression. Rather than entering the Horizon Festival as an established racer, players begin as a mere tourist who must earn their way into the festival and work up through its escalating ranks.

More gameplay information on Forza Horizon 6 is expected to be released in the coming weeks, so stay tuned for more. The game launches on May 19, 2026 for PC and Xbox Series S|X, as per a leak, with a PlayStation 5 version coming later.

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