Forza Horizon 6 has officially dropped two legendary multi-million dollar 1990s hypercars into the mix: the 1998 TVR Cerbera Speed 12 and the 1993 Schuppan 962CR. Arriving side-by-side as exclusive reward cars during the Autumn season of the Series 2: Horizon Decades festival playlist, these monsters are already shaking up the online metagame.
If you are a fan of high-consequence track weapons and raw, unfiltered 90s power, you are going to want to clear some time this week to get them into your garage.
Because both of these cars are locked behind the seasonal playlist, you won't find them sitting in the standard Autoshow. If you miss their dedicated seasonal window, your only options will be stalking the in-game Auction House or waiting around for a future festival re-run.
Here is exactly how you can add them to your collection:
1998 TVR Cerbera Speed 12: You need to earn 20 Points on the Festival Playlist during the Horizon Decades Autumn season.
1993 Schuppan 962CR: This one takes a bit more work, requiring 40 Points on the same Autumn playlist. If you were active during the early Series 1 activities, you might have already grabbed it by winning the "Trail Mix" Dirt Seasonal Championship using a B-Class modern rally car.
Built in the real world to be an untamable, borderline terrifying road-legal supercar, the TVR Cerbera Speed 12 brings that exact same chaotic energy to the festival. In its stock configuration, it is a massive handful to drive, but it acts as an absolute dream canvas for custom drag and top-speed tuners.
Engine & Power: Under the hood sits a massive 7.7-liter naturally aspirated V12 engine that churns out roughly 800 horsepower right out of the box.
Weight & Materials: It uses a specialized Kevlar-weave body paired with a dedicated GT racer chassis, making the entire build incredibly lightweight.
Metagame Utility: Thanks to its insane power-to-weight ratio and rear-wheel-drive setup, the Horizon community has quickly adopted the Speed 12 as a top-tier Drag Strip monster. If you push it to its absolute limits with a maxed-out X-Class build, it can easily shatter its stock 240 mph limit and comfortably breach 275 mph.
On the completely opposite end of the engineering spectrum is the Schuppan 962CR. This machine is a carbon-fiber, street-legal re-imagining of the iconic Porsche 962 Le Mans endurance racer, designed by racing champion Vern Schuppan.
Engine & Power: It is powered by a mid-mounted 3.3-liter twin-turbocharged flat-six engine that generates 600 horsepower and 479 lb-ft of torque.
Weight & Handling: Because it is built entirely out of carbon fiber, it tips the scales at a mere 2,315 lbs (1,050 kg). It also boasts a beautifully balanced 45% front / 55% rear weight distribution.
Metagame Utility: The Schuppan 962CR has quickly become an absolute S1-Class tier leader for road and street sprint circuits. Drivers are putting together incredibly grippy S1 builds that can pull over 1.28 Gs of lateral force while maintaining a top speed of 230 mph. With a 0–60 mph acceleration time of under 2.4 seconds, it routinely outpaces standard S1 favorites. Interestingly, players have also found a niche for it as a highly optimized vehicle for clearing off-road PR Stunts and Speed Zones due to its mid-engine balance and lightweight stability.
To get the most out of these two hypercars on the tarmac, keep a few tuning strategies in mind:
TVR Power Management: The stock Speed 12 is notorious for spinning its rear tires into oblivion. Resist the urge to just slam raw power upgrades onto it immediately. Instead, prioritize upgrading to Race Tire Compounds and take the time to fine-tune your launch gear ratios. This keeps the car from snapping sideways the second you try to accelerate out of low-speed corners.
The Schuppan's Performance Tiers: With the structural re-balancing of performance tiers in Forza Horizon 6, over-upgrading the Schuppan past its sweet spot can accidentally bleed into the highly competitive, race-car-dominated R-Class. For the best online multiplayer results, build a dedicated S1 grip tune and keep it saved specifically for street racing.
Keep an Eye on Telemetry: Don't hesitate to open up the game's live telemetry menu while test-driving your customized builds. Testing your setups on festival drag strips and bumpy, tight highway circuits will give you a clear look at how the suspension load reacts to high-speed pavement changes.
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