Highlights

  • The cars in Forza Motorsport have raised the bar for detailed models with their revamped lighting system and impressive effects for wear and weathering.
  • Developer Playground Games should ensure that the cars in the next Forza Horizon have the same level of detail as their Motorsport counterparts to match its graphical fidelity.
  • The engine improvements in Forza Motorsport, such as realistic reflections and damage systems, would be a perfect pairing for the rough and wild racing found in Forza Horizon.

While it's still unknown when the next entry in the Forza Horizon franchise will be released, if and when it does arrive it should learn one key lesson from Forza Motorsport. The former franchise has always excelled at delivering graphically lush open worlds for players to race through, but the latter raised the bar for detailed car models with its most recent release. Even as it seeks to break new ground with its long-running series, developer Playground Games should ensure that cars in the next Forza Horizon are equally as detailed as their Motorsport counterparts.

No one could accuse Playground Games of slouching when it comes to the cars in Forza Horizon 5, with the game featuring some stunning recreations of both real-world and fictional vehicles. But, with its revamped lighting system and impressive effects for representing wear and weathering, Forza Motorsport has arguably managed to edge it out when it comes to the quality of its car models. By giving the next Forza Horizon’s cars the same level of detail as the franchise’s always-impressive environments, Playground Games can match Forza Motorsport’s graphical fidelity and better reflect the rough racing the open-world series is known for.

RELATED: All Features Confirmed for Forza Motorsport

Forza Motorsports’ Engine Improvements Would Pair Well With the Next Forza Horizon

ford mustang gt forza motorsport

Developer Turn 10 Studios has little room to run wild with environmental design in Forza Motorsport given the constraints of the sim racing genre, which may explain why so much effort was focused on making the cars look spectacular. Even though the tracks in Forza Motorsport can sometimes look nearly identical to the real-world locations, it’s the cars racing through their turns that really steal the show. While the geometric complexity of each in-game vehicle doesn’t appear to have been drastically increased compared to the cars in Forza Horizon 5, new lighting and rendering techniques make the machines in Motorsport look decidedly more lifelike.

The crisply rendered cars seen in Turn 10 Studios’ sim racer are largely a result of improvements made to the ForzaTech engine that powers both the Horizon and Motorsport franchise’s recent entries. Forza Motorsport’s light-reactive shaders let cars accurately reflect the game’s ray-traced lighting, while improvements to how paint is portrayed mean they look realistic whether they’re caked in dirt or fresh off the showroom floor. These improvements would work well with the gorgeous, open-world environments that have become a hallmark of the Forza Horizon franchise. They’d also allow its next entry to accurately reflect the accumulated damage, dirt, and debris from the game’s offroad racing.

Forza Horizon 6 Could Do Justice to the Dings and Dents from Its Offroad Races

A Ford Bronco and a few other cars driving in a lightning storm in Forza Horizon 5

The same engine improvements that allow Forza Motorsport to realistically reflect the way light plays off of cars and other surfaces could also let the next Forza Horizon have the series’ most impressive damage system to date. While the franchise has always portrayed car damage in one form or another, even head-on crashes in Forza Horizon 5 leave little more than dings and dents on the vehicles involved. This is why Forza Motorsport’s more robust vehicle damage system would be a good fit for the often rough and wild racing found in its sister series.

One of Forza Motorsport’s most impressive features is the way the game renders the damage, dirt, and debris that accumulate on each car during a race. Contextual damage dings and dents cars in the areas they’ve been hit, even causing paint to chip and scratch realistically after a collision. Combined with the ForzaTech engine’s ability to realistically build up dirt and grime on a car’s surface over time, these engine improvements would be a perfect pairing with the offroad racing that features heavily in the Forza Horizon franchise.

By giving the cars in the next Forza Horizon the same stunning level of detail as their Forza Motorsport counterparts, the open-world franchise would have its most visually impressive outing yet. It could even lead to the realistically rendered rides stealing the show from the next Forza Horizon’s assuredly stunning setting.

Forza Motorsport is available for PC and Xbox Series X/S

MORE: Is Forza Motorsport's Race Day Car Pack Worth It?