Reviews from

in the past


I like this game, all the Forzas are fun, and this isn't my favorite, but it's a good game nonetheless

Ya aquí se les empieza a ir la olla


Um dos meus favoritos da série

Forza Horizon 3 is a bit of a weaker entry for me personally. The Australian Outback and coast aren't my favorite choices of location and the map is either too open or too cramped. The game was also the first in the series to feature HDR, though it was rather poorly implemented on the Xbox version of the game.

Suing Turn 10 for false advertising after taking my lamborghini to the beach and it immediately combusts after touching a surface that isn't airport tarmac

Big W but annoying to play now

This might still be my favorite map in the series and at this point the neon diarrhea hadn't overwhelmed the festival. The expansions were the best of the series as well.

Not as good as 4 for me, but an amazing game nonetheless!

This forza is one of the best of it series!

Build Disneyland for motorheads and deliver the worst possible final showdown ever made.

Dare I say it: best racing game ever? Though the Metacritic score doesn't reflect its quality, this is the most fun I have ever had with a racing game.

Variety is the word of the day Setting a racing game in Australia was an inspired choice. We got beach racing, desert tracks, city street racing, racing towns, racing in rainforests, racing in industrial parks, and if you get the DLC, racing in snow and in fantasy Hot Wheels tracks.

There's over 500 cars to choose from, and the difficulty, control, and feel are all just right and completely adjustable if you are struggling. The graphics are incredibly beautiful. The team apparently spent some time in Australia taking reference photos just to make sure the skyboxes were right. The effort did not go to waste.

The soundtrack is an eclectic blend of genres, and you can always use your own music. The aforementioned variety is on display with the kind of racing you can do, too. You got high speed racing, truck racing, dune buggies, you name it, this game probably has it. Depending on how you adjust the settings, you can play it like an arcade racer or make it as simulationist as you want.

Other Forza Horizon games have come and gone since this one, but for its variety in setting and race types, its perfect difficulty curve, and just how fun it is to control, I think this is the best racing video game ever made. Give it a shot!

o melhor da franquia pra mim, o mapa, eventos e dlcs são incríveis (tanto que reaproveitaram a dlc da Hot Wheels no FH5) aqui o jogo ainda tinha um sistema de recompensa decente, vc não comprava o carro mais caro do jogo em algumas horas pra depois descartar, eram dias juntando dinheiro, mas no final valia apena, a turn 10 ainda se importava com os sons dos carros aqui, depois lavou as mãos.

So I wanna start out by saying, after three years of playing, I’m only on festival level three. That’s because there’s so much to do in this game that you forget about the main story. The Australian island this takes place on is one of the most beautiful settings for any video game I’ve played. Most of my ~400 hours of play consists of exploring this huge map, and I still don’t have most of the roads unlocked. I haven’t even delved into the racing aspect much, but racing on these roads feels amazing nonetheless. One of my favorites of all time.

I like austrailia and cars, thats it

This is like being in a newsagency, somewhere between the car mags and the travel mags or post card section. Horizon 3 is half racing game, half open world - but more aptly it's 50% dedicated to being a sizzling, autoshow-worthy display of beautiful cars and being a travel guide's luscious recreation of Australia.

I'm biased, outside of Mad Max, I've never seen Australia really represented in gaming. This game features one Aussie accent, so I basically still haven't. It's not an accurate representation of Australia but it's not trying to be. It's a gorgeous representation of Australia, though. The way it connects the various in-game biomes is chef's kiss. It's a beautifully designed game that makes me want to leave Melbourne and backpack around the outback and Yarra Valley. Beautiful variety in this game. Accurately straight roads too. Amazing skies. Maybe the best skies I've seen in game. I had to stop driving often to admire them. Just a jaw dropping array of sunsets mixed with really realistic overcast and clear skies. I played this because after Driveclub I was yearning for a semi simulation racer with some genuine bombastic scripted events that take advantage of realistic looking cars in realistic nature environments with dynamic changes. Or like if Gran Turismo and Uncharted were spliced together. Plus I saw a YouTube video about how good this was and I remembered I still have an Xbox One (which I haven't touched for months).

To add, much like Driveclub, Horizon 3 is a game that doesn't exist outside of a physical disc in the year of our lord 2024, so all hail physical media because at least it cannot be erased as easily as digital content. Unlike Driveclub, however, there's more than enough content and game here to keep one entertained for hours. Not that I think volume of content is always the most sufficient way to compare and judge games. I still think that moment-to-moment Driveclub is a more visceral experience, especially as a racing game, but there's no denying Horizon 3 has more cars, more tracks and event types, more customisation and just flat out more to see and play with, which when considering both games don't exist today and can only be played offline off of a disc, it does make a difference.

I misjudged the Forza Horizon series. It might have been what I wanted all along without realising it. I don't know. I'm going to play Horizon 4 next while it's still on Game Pass and still exists. I did find my brief time with it three years ago off putting, mostly the presentation. That's still an issue with Horizon 3 but I guess I managed to put it aside easier here. I'm not a huge fan of the corporatised, overly sponsored "happy" vibe to the whole festival atmosphere. It's a bit insincere and phony. What I liked about Driveclub is the fact that it kind of lacked atmosphere. It was like all the personality was sucked up by a vaccum, which sounds like a neg, but I'd rather have no personality than the soulless "bank-sponsored community arts project" vibe Horizon has for some reason.

Anyway. Good game. The driving in this is kind of right down the middle, where it's basically an arcade racer but I guess there's enough options to tune your car to something more. I wouldn't know, I didn't bother with any of it. I would just get a new car, slap on a suggested community design, and race around. The cars all looked fantastic. Mostly handled well and somewhat true to the look and feel of the car's design. Nice weight to most of the cars I drove. The progression system was lightweight and relatively rewarding. I think the wheel spins are rigged. But I wound up driving a nice variety of cars from a 91 BMW M3, to a Lamborghini Aventador to a Ford Shelby Raptor to a nice Rolls Royce Wraith (which fulfilled my childhood dream of racing a Rolls in a Need for Speed=illegal street racing game, something I don't remember ever finding an option for when I was 13). I only wish I knew how to drift...better or at all in this game. Solid experience.





no progression in arcade game ?

Me lo compre cuando se me acabo el game pass y me arrepiento en verdad, no me acaba de molar el mapa

The racing is pretty decent and the map is phenomenal.


the best forza horizon. many hours sunk in

Not as good as 4 for me, but an amazing game nonetheless!

If you like no brainer car game, this is gold. Driving with super fast cars jumping around australia is magnificent