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:
- Brake in a straight line before the corner
- Turn in at the apex (the inside point of the corner)
- 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)
- Approach corner at moderate speed
- Tap handbrake briefly while turning
- Counter-steer to control the slide
- Feather the throttle to maintain the drift
Power Over Drift (For Intermediate)
- Enter corner with more speed
- Don't brake — just lift off the throttle
- Get the car rotated with steering input
- Slam the throttle to break traction on the rear wheels
Feint Drift (Scandinavian Flick)
- Steer away from the corner first (left before a right turn)
- Quickly flick the wheel into the corner
- The weight transfer breaks rear traction
- 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.