Gameplay

Racing Tips & Tricks — Drifting, Tuning & Advanced Techniques

Advanced 10 min read

These techniques are based on the Forza Horizon series' established physics engine. While FH6 may introduce new handling characteristics, these fundamentals should carry over.

Braking: The Most Important Skill

Most players think racing is about going fast. It's actually about slowing down at the right time.

The Braking Triangle

Technique How To When To Use
Straight-line braking Brake while the wheel is straight High-speed corners, hairpins
Trail braking Brake while beginning to turn Medium corners, entry grip
Lift-off oversteer Release throttle mid-turn Tight corners, sharp direction changes

Threshold Braking

The key to fast lap times: brake as hard as possible without locking the wheels. If you're using ABS (default on), you can brake at 100% pressure. If you've turned ABS off, you'll need to find the edge of grip just before the wheels lock.

Pro tip: Brake earlier than you think you need to, then practice moving your braking point later. This is the single fastest way to improve your lap times.

Cornering Line: Slow In, Fast Out

The golden rule of racing:

  1. Brake in a straight line before the corner
  2. Turn in at the apex (the inside point of the corner)
  3. Accelerate from the apex to the exit

Corner Types in Japan

Corner Type Example in FH6 Approach
Hairpin Mountain touge turns Late apex, use handbrake if needed
Sweeper Tokyo highway curves Carry speed, smooth steering
Chicane City street sections Quick left-right, straight-line braking
Decreasing radius Hakone downhill Brake later, tighter turn at exit

Drifting: Techniques for Every Situation

Basic Drift (For Beginners)

  1. Approach corner at moderate speed
  2. Tap handbrake briefly while turning
  3. Counter-steer to control the slide
  4. Feather the throttle to maintain the drift

Power Over Drift (For Intermediate)

  1. Enter corner with more speed
  2. Don't brake — just lift off the throttle
  3. Get the car rotated with steering input
  4. Slam the throttle to break traction on the rear wheels

Feint Drift (Scandinavian Flick)

  1. Steer away from the corner first (left before a right turn)
  2. Quickly flick the wheel into the corner
  3. The weight transfer breaks rear traction
  4. This is the most effective technique for hairpins

Car Tuning Basics

You don't need to be a master tuner to make your car handle better. Focus on these three adjustments:

1. Tire Pressure

  • Lower pressure = more grip, slower top speed
  • Higher pressure = less grip, higher top speed
  • Start with the default and adjust 1-2 PSI based on feel

2. Gearing

  • Short gearing = faster acceleration, lower top speed
  • Long gearing = slower acceleration, higher top speed
  • For street racing: short gearing wins
  • For highway/high-speed tracks: long gearing wins

3. Downforce (Aero)

  • More downforce = better cornering, slower straight-line speed
  • Less downforce = worse cornering, faster straight-line speed
  • Add downforce for touge/mountain courses, reduce for highway racing

AWD vs RWD vs FWD

Drivetrain Best For Characteristics
AWD All-around, dirt, rain Easy to control, great launch, slight understeer
RWD Dry road racing, drifting Oversteer tendency, requires more skill, faster on dry tarmac
FWD B-class and below Understeer, efficient on tight courses

For beginners: Stick with AWD cars. You'll be faster immediately. For advanced players: RWD is faster on dry roads once you master throttle control.

Weather & Time of Day

FH6 introduces dynamic seasons across Japan's diverse regions:

  • Rain — brake earlier, avoid curbs (they get slippery), AWD recommended
  • Night — follow the racing line, brake markers are harder to see
  • Snow (Hokkaido) — massively reduced grip, winter tires help, AWD essential
  • Autumn leaves — beautiful but leaf-covered roads can be slippery

Start with the basics? Review our Beginner's Guide first.

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