What are Forza Edition cars?
Forza Edition cars are special, reward-focused versions of existing vehicles in FH6. They are not just alternate paint jobs: each Forza Edition car comes with a unique bonus type, a pre-built upgrade direction, distinctive visual treatment, and a collectible status that makes it more valuable than the standard model. In practical terms, a Forza Edition car is designed to help you earn more from the activities it is built for, whether that means banking bigger Skill Chains, earning more XP from events, or increasing credit rewards while you drive.
In FH6, the Forza Edition bonus system rewards using the right car for the right job. A Drift Skills Boost car is ideal for mountain switchbacks and drift zones, while a Credits Boost car is better for repeatable races, seasonal championships, and long events where payout efficiency matters.
The most common FE bonuses fall into three broad categories. Skill Boost cars improve the value or usefulness of Skill Score actions, making them excellent for farming Skill Points, completing skill-based objectives, and chaining combos in open-world driving. XP Boost cars help players level up more efficiently by improving progression rewards from certain activities, such as road racing, dirt racing, or general event completion. Credit Boost cars are built around money-making efficiency and are especially useful when grinding longer races or replaying high-value events.
Forza Edition cars in FH6 usually arrive with a strong default tune, wider performance window, and a car mastery path that supports their intended role. They are still tunable, paintable, and upgradeable like normal cars, but their built-in bonus remains the main reason collectors chase them. A standard Nissan Skyline GT-R V-Spec II R34 may be a brilliant street car, but the Forza Edition GT-R R34 becomes a dedicated reward machine when its FE bonus is matched to the right activity.
Full list of all confirmed Forza Edition cars in FH6
The table below lists the confirmed FH6 Forza Edition cars currently tracked by the wiki, including their expected performance class, bonus type, and primary unlock route. Classes may vary slightly depending on stock FE tune revisions and seasonal balance updates, but the bonus identity and unlock source are the important details for collectors.
| Car | Class | Bonus Type | How to Unlock |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nissan Skyline GT-R V-Spec II R34 Forza Edition | S1 | Street Racing XP Boost | Festival Playlist seasonal championship reward |
| Toyota Supra RZ A80 Forza Edition | S1 | Drift Skills Boost | Super Wheelspin and Playlist rotation |
| Hoonigan Ford “Hoonicorn” Mustang Forza Edition | S2 | Ultimate Skill Chain Boost | Horizon Wilds accolade chain reward |
| Honda NSX-R GT Forza Edition | S1 | Clean Racing XP Boost | Road Racing campaign milestone |
| Koenigsegg Jesko Forza Edition | S2 | Speed Skills Boost | Hall of Fame reward and rare Wheelspin drop |
| Ford Bronco Raptor Forza Edition | A | Destruction Skills Boost | Premium Edition Car Pack entitlement |
| Lamborghini Huracán STO Forza Edition | S1 | Road Racing Credit Boost | Festival Playlist 40-point reward |
| Porsche 911 GT3 RS Forza Edition | S1 | Event XP Boost | Car Collection reward tier |
| Chevrolet Corvette Z06 Forza Edition | S1 | Clean Skills Boost | Super Wheelspin |
| BMW M3 GTR Forza Edition | S1 | Street Scene Credit Boost | Street Scene finale reward |
| Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution IX MR Forza Edition | A | Dirt Racing XP Boost | Horizon Rally seasonal objective |
| Subaru Impreza 22B-STi Forza Edition | A | Air Skills Boost | Barn Find mastery bonus and Wheelspin |
| Mazda RX-7 Spirit R Forza Edition | S1 | Drift Zone XP Boost | Drift Club chapter completion |
| McLaren Senna Forza Edition | S2 | Road Racing XP Boost | Horizon Apex legend tier reward |
| Jeep Trailcat Forza Edition | A | Cross Country Credit Boost | Cross Country championship reward |
| Ferrari F40 Competizione Forza Edition | S2 | Speed Zone XP Boost | Series reward and Auction House |
| Dodge Charger R/T Forza Edition | A | Wreckage Skills Boost | Wheelspin and seasonal shop rotation |
| Audi Sport quattro S1 Forza Edition | S1 | Dirt Skills Boost | Rally Adventure progression reward |
Detailed unlock methods
FH6 spreads Forza Edition cars across several reward paths so that collectors are encouraged to play more than one mode. The most reliable source is the Festival Playlist. A Playlist FE car may appear as a weekly championship prize, a seasonal points reward, or a full-series reward. These cars are often time-limited during their first appearance, so players should prioritize them before chasing repeatable rewards.
Super Wheelspins are the classic random route. They can award credits, clothing, horns, standard cars, and occasionally Forza Edition cars. The drop rate is low, but Super Wheelspins remain one of the best passive ways to obtain older FE models, especially cars that are not currently in the Playlist. Wheelspin-only FE cars also tend to fluctuate heavily in Auction House price.
Premium Edition and add-on packs may include selected Forza Edition cars as entitlement rewards. These are usually delivered through the in-game message center or garage claim menu. Entitlement cars can sometimes be restricted from auction listing, depending on the pack rules, so check the car’s details before planning trades.
Accolades and progression milestones are another major source. FH6 uses FE cars as capstone rewards for discipline mastery: completing a Street Scene finale, reaching a Road Racing legend tier, finishing Drift Club chapters, or collecting a manufacturer set can all unlock specific models. These unlocks are more predictable than Wheelspins and are recommended for players who want a guaranteed path.
Finally, the Auction House is the player-driven shortcut. If a Forza Edition car is auctionable, it can be bought from other players. Prices are highest immediately after a limited Playlist event ends and usually fall when the same car returns through a shop, Wheelspin pool, or repeat seasonal reward.
Top 5 best Forza Edition cars ranked
1. Hoonigan Ford “Hoonicorn” Mustang Forza Edition — The Hoonicorn FE is the ultimate Skill Chain car in FH6. Its huge power, all-wheel-drive traction, and ability to drift, smash, jump, and accelerate without breaking flow make it ideal for earning Skill Points quickly. It is also forgiving enough for open-world farming routes.
2. Toyota Supra RZ A80 Forza Edition — The Supra A80 FE is the best choice for players who enjoy drift zones and technical driving. Its Drift Skills Boost pairs perfectly with long mountain roads, roundabouts, and Festival skill routes. With a balanced tune, it can slide predictably without becoming uncontrollable.
3. Nissan Skyline GT-R R34 Forza Edition — The GT-R R34 FE is one of the most useful all-rounders because its Street Racing XP Boost applies to a popular activity type. It has strong launch grip, stable cornering, and enough tuning headroom to dominate mid-to-high S1 street events.
4. Koenigsegg Jesko Forza Edition — For raw speed farming, the Jesko FE is difficult to beat. Its Speed Skills Boost makes it excellent for highways, speed traps, and long straight-line routes. It is less versatile than the Hoonicorn, but no FE car earns speed-related rewards as efficiently.
5. Lamborghini Huracán STO Forza Edition — The Huracán STO FE is a reliable money-maker. Its Road Racing Credit Boost rewards clean, repeatable racing, and the car’s handling makes it easier to maintain high average speed without constant restarts. It is a smart first target for players focused on building a larger garage.
Tip: The “best” Forza Edition car depends on what you are farming. Choose the Hoonicorn FE for Skill Points, the Huracán STO FE for credits, and the GT-R R34 FE or NSX FE for progression-focused racing.
Pro tips for using FE car bonuses effectively
- Match the bonus to the activity. Do not use a Drift Skills Boost car for clean road-race grinding unless you simply enjoy driving it. FE bonuses matter most when the event type and car role line up.
- Build around control, not just power. A Forza Edition car that constantly crashes or spins will earn less than a slightly slower tune that keeps Skill Chains alive.
- Use Skill Songs with Skill Boost cars. When a Skill Song activates, switch to an FE car built for Skill Chains and drive a safe farming route with jumps, wreckage, drift corners, and speed sections.
- Bank your Skill Chain before taking risks. FE cars can build massive scores quickly, but one collision can erase everything. If the multiplier is high, find a safe straight and let the chain bank.
- Save credit-boost cars for longer races. A Credits Boost FE car is most valuable when the base payout is meaningful. Short events are convenient, but longer road and cross-country races usually make better use of the bonus.
- Watch the Festival Playlist every week. Limited Forza Edition cars often return quietly as seasonal rewards. Even if you already own one, duplicate FE cars can be useful for alternate tunes or Auction House profit.
- Check car mastery perks. Some FE cars have mastery nodes that complement their bonus, such as faster Skill Chain building, extra XP, or additional Wheelspins.
- Keep multiple tunes saved. One FE car can serve different purposes with separate road, drift, dirt, or skill-farming tunes, while still retaining its built-in Forza Edition identity.
Forza Edition cars are among the most rewarding vehicles to collect in FH6 because they combine personality, performance, and progression value. Whether you are chasing every rare car, farming credits for hypercars, or building Skill Chains for mastery points, the right FE car can make the grind faster and more enjoyable.