Turn 10 has announced the end of dynamic support for Forza Motorsport two years after the game’s release and no longer plans to introduce up-to-date cars, tracks, features or regular bug fixes.
The game will transition into a more basic support mode, so online servers will remain dynamic, there will be special in-game events and competitions, but otherwise the content of the live services will be that featured tours and reward cars will be recycled from month to month. We expect them to address any critical issues through patches as well.
The team writes:
As our team is focused on delivering the best Forza Horizon 6 experience in 2026, we have no plans to introduce up-to-date cars, tracks, features or regular bug fixes to Forza Motorsport. However, we will continue to support the game by maintaining dynamic online servers, hosting special events and competitions, and re-introducing previously released Featured Tours and Reward Cars on a monthly basis until all content is available and you can exploit it whenever you want.
We hope you’ll continue to race with us in Forza Motorsport in 2026 – see you on the track!
This announcement was somewhat inevitable after Microsoft decided to gut the studio earlier this year, laying off roughly half of the team amid a wave of layoffs across the gaming industry and the company as a whole. This was the result of the rather disappointing release of the latest Forza Motorsport game, which was years in the making and aimed to bring the series to the level of Gran Turismo and others as a long-term racing gaming platform. After the game’s release in 2023, car development was changed, a up-to-date major track and multi-class races were added, and more, but this was not enough to keep the studio safe and sound.
This means that all that’s left of what was a staple of the simcade racing genre is the more open-world arcade action of Forza Horizon, which is coming to Japan next year with Forza Horizon 6.
Source: Forza
