Image via Turn 10

Forza Motorsport is returning some of its previously sunset content, updating old events, adding drift mode, and loads more

Oh hey, nice!

I’m usually the first to bemoan the modern Forza games’ ridiculous insistence on temporarily adding new content to the game, only to yank it back out in a few weeks’ time, but this time I’ve got better news. Turn 10 announced that Forza Motorsport is un-sunsetting its timed content.

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Well, alright, it’s not all timed content that’s coming back to Forza Motorsport, and there are still some problems left for Turn 10 to discuss, but this is excellent news regardless, and it ought to be celebrated. In a recent blog post on Steam bearing the mysterious, initially equally ominous and promising title to “A Message to the Motorsport Community,” this blog is basically all good news through-and-through. Between new tracks, the new Drift Mode, more ways to unlock timed rewards, and Builders’ Cup upgrades, Forza Motorsport fans have got much to look forward to.

Screenshot by Destructoid

Turn 10 announces oodles of good news for Forza Motorsport, including the big un-sunsetting of content

To get the elephant out of the room first, the un-sunsetting of Forza Motorsport‘s annoyingly timed content isn’t going to be comprehensive. Not yet, at least, as Turn 10 is currently only going to add select temporary cups and rewards from prior seasons to the game: “Later this year, we will add select series and rewards from previous updates as permanent additions to the Builders Cup,” says the announcement, adding that “next year we’ll be introducing a number of permanent race car-focused Tours to the Career.”

Not bad, right? This builds on top of the announcement of the new Challenge Hub feature, too, which will allow players to unlock specific timed and permanent rewards in a variety of different ways. Upgrades to Builder’s Cup and the Challenge Hub should help alleviate some of Motorsport‘s most annoying FOMO, in theory. If Turn 10 continues to upgrade Builder’s Cup on a yearly(ish) basis, though, there won’t be much to complain about in this regard.

Before the end of the year, Turn 10 has also promised all of the following boons:

  • Weather options for Free-Play racing (ranging from Partly Cloudy to Rain Lightning)
  • Sunset Peninsula race track, slated for Update 13 (mid-October)
  • Bathurst race track, slated for Update 15 (December)
  • a substantially improved Spectate Mode
  • Drift Mode, accompanied by Formula Drift vehicles being added to the Showroom
  • Creative Hub for vinyls, tunes, photos, replays, etc.
  • Share Codes for custom-made content

And loads more, which you can read about in the full blog post over on Steam. Should many of these features have been in the game on day one? Absolutely. Is it still good that Turn 10 is looking to continue improving Forza Motorsport for the foreseeable future, though? Absolutely. “In 2025, we will continue to update Forza Motorsport, and as in 2024, this will include new features, bug fixes, and additional cars and tracks,” says the blog.

As I mentioned earlier, there are still some problems that Turn 10 needs to deal with outside of adding more permanent content to the game. Forza Motorsport‘s performance and stability are still somewhat iffy on PC, to begin with, and its always-online nature leaves much to be desired for those of us who are on shoddy, unstable Internet. So, perhaps, the next time Turn 10 posts a “message to the Motorsport community,” they might tackle these issues head-on. In the interim, kudos!


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Author
Image of Filip Galekovic
Filip Galekovic
A lifetime gamer and writer, Filip has successfully made a career out of combining the two just in time for the bot-driven AI revolution to come into its own.