Announced at E3 2021, Forza Horizon 5 moves Playground Games’ racing festival to Mexico for what the developers are claiming will be the biggest and most varied Forza Horizon to date. It looks ridiculously pretty, and promises a pile of improvements to the series’ sandbox racing, which is already the best around.
We don’t have long to wait, either, as Forza Horizon 5’s E3 demo also revealed that it would release later in 2021. Given that Forza Horizon 4 is still my favourite racing game by some distance, I can’t wait to see what the new location brings.
Here’s everything we know about Forza Horizon 5, from when it will be in our hands, to its new features, improvements and impressive tech.
What is the Forza Horizon 5 release date?
The Forza Horizon 5 release date is November 9, 2021. It will also release on Xbox Game Pass on the same day.
Watch the Forza Horizon 5 trailer
Do you like cars? Do you like detailed, exotic environments? The Forza Horizon 5 announce trailer has them both, backed by the kind of hyperactive horn-based aspirational pop music that the series loves so much.
But wait, there’s more. Also at Microsoft’s E3 showcase, Playground presented a more in-depth gameplay trailer that goes into detail about the new features and tech underlying this release. It’s seven minutes long and covers everything from the new event types to the individual needles rendered on every cactus.
Playground also showed off lots of gameplay footage at Gamescom this year, including a deep-dive into many of the Forza Horizon 5’s new features. We also got two new trailers. The first is a cover car reveal that gives us a closer look at some of the game’s gorgeous vehicle models driving through the Mexican landscape:
The second trailer shows off eight minutes of new gameplay. Highlights include cars parachuting out of cargo planes, racing down the side of an active volcano, and driving into a massive dust storm.
What’s the Forza Horizon 5 setting?
This time, the festival moves to Mexico. The map includes 11 different biomes, highlighting the variety of the country:
- Canyon: Mountain roads surrounded by towering rock formations.
- Jungle: A rainforest dotted with ruins and temples.
- Swamp: Lots of water and mangrove trees, perfect for off-roading.
- Tropical Coast: Long sandy beaches to race along—watch out for the huts and palm trees, though.
- Urban City: An urban driving environment, with streets, tunnels, and lots of Spanish colonial architecture.
- Living Desert: Plenty of cacti and desert foliage dot this terrain.
- Sand Desert: Classic desert, with sand dunes and long roads.
- Rocky Coast: Beaches bordered with cliffs and seascape rock formations.
- Farmland: Rolling fenced-fields of crops and fruit trees.
- Arid Hills: An elevated area of dry grass and trees.
- Volcano: This biome boasts La Gran Caldera, an active volcano which is the highest peak ever included in a Forza Horizon game.
You can see most of these biomes on the Forza Horizon 5 map. The recent trailers really show off the Mexican landscape, and how we can expect the game’s dynamnic weather system to alter these biomes.
What should I know about Forza Horizon 5’s gameplay?
It’s fair to expect Forza Horizon 5’s racing to keep the series’ balance between the realistic and the casual. As great as its cars look, a more arcade sensibility and plenty of optional assists mean it’s less of a sim than a celebration of cars and racing in general. The events will likely follow suit.
Previous games featured plenty of racing, but also veered into stunts, skill combos and the joy of going very fast down a busy motorway for the sheer fun of it. Outside of the main career, optional side jobs would set challenges in specific cars, from point-to-point time trials to more outlandish challenges like racking up a certain number of drift points around a series of difficult bends.
For Forza Horizon 5, a new event type has been added to the campaign: Expeditions. These task players with travelling to a new part of the map. In a Eurogamer interview, Mike Brown calls Expeditions “a curated experience through the world where you’ll have a character who really excitedly calls out all the cool things you can see.” They also act as a showcase of Forza Horizon 5’s tech. Brown references tropical storms and an active volcano: things that can happen in free roam, but are guaranteed to be showcased in the curated mode.
Other new features include Horizon Arcade, which is Forza Horizon 5’s replacement of its predecessor’s underwhelming Forzathon Live. Arcade is a series of public events that will appear around the map, featuring 12 different minigames that players will work collaboratively to complete. These events will chain together, letting players drop in and out as they please.
Also revealed at the E3 showcase, Forza Horizon 5 will feature a toolset called Events Lab that will let players create their own events. According to Mike Brown, the toolset is based on Playground’s own internal tools. “It’s very powerful. It’s a rule-based system where you put in: when this happens, this is the outcome, when this happens with these conditions, then this is the action,” he told Eurogamer.
Is Forza Horizon 5 coming to Game Pass?
Yes. As with all of Microsoft’s first-party releases, Forza Horizon 5 will be released on day one on Xbox Game Pass, as well as on Steam and through the Microsoft Store.
Forza Horizon 5 has ray-traced audio
One of the new features coming in Forza Horizon 5 is the game’s ray-traced audio meaning that engine sounds will change based on your environment. Whether you’re in the middle of a rainforest or zooming down a city-street, the sound of your car’s engine adapts dynamically based on your changing location.
After engine sound complaints from fans surrounding Forza Horizon 4, Playground is also adding 320 car recordings to the new instalment, as well as granular hybrid looping, which draws from “thousands of little audio files” to react precisely to how the player is driving.
What are Forza Horizon 5’s system requirements?
So far, only the minimum requirements have been announced. To play Forza Horizon 5 you’ll need:
- Processor: Intel i3-4170 @ 3.7Ghz OR Intel i5 750 @ 2.67Ghz
- Memory: 8 GB RAM
- Graphics: NVidia GTX 760 OR AMD RX 460
- DirectX: Version 12
- Storage: 80 GB available space
Despite this, given how Forza Horizon 5 looks, running it at max settings will likely require a much more powerful rig. We’ll update as soon as the recommended settings are released.
Who will be Forza Horizon 5’s most irritating NPC?
We don’t know yet, but, based on previous games in the series, this will be a hotly contested category.