Series 3 takes FH6 in a sharper Italian direction, but the cars are only half the story. The real changes sit in the way players earn rare rewards, trade them, and chase clean leaderboard times. If you're filling gaps in your garage, browsing FH6 Cars can make the grind feel a bit less random before the new seasonal events rotate out.
The New Series Rewards Have Real Pull
The headline car is the Lamborghini Temerario, locked behind 80 Series Points. It's a proper attention-grabber, too. Lamborghini's latest production model has plenty of modern supercar drama, and seeing it arrive so soon gives this playlist a stronger identity. Reach 160 points and the Ferrari 296 GTB comes back into rotation, which is handy for anyone who missed its Series 1 release.
The weekly rewards are less predictable, in a good way. Summer adds the De Tomaso Pantera GT5 for its Horizon debut, while the Maserati MC12 returns. Autumn brings the Abarth 124 Spyder and Lamborghini Huracan Evo. Winter is all about the Lancia 037 Stradale and Ferrari Roma. Spring closes the run with the Huracan Evo Spyder and Pagani Huayra R.
What Is Worth Chasing First
You don't need to clear every activity blindly. A sensible route saves time, especially if your playlist progress is already spread across races, PR stunts, and challenges.
1. Grab the Temerario before chasing optional rewards.
2. Save Winter events for the Lancia 037 Stradale.
3. Use Spring to finish missing Festival Playlist points.
The De Tomaso is probably the month's biggest talking point for collectors. It has Motorsport history, plenty of attitude, and that old-school shape that still looks brilliant beside newer hypercars. The Pagani Huayra R is a different animal altogether. It's built for the track, so expect players to test it immediately in Rivals and custom EventLab circuits.
Car Pass Adds More Variety
The monthly Car Pass line-up fills in some useful gaps. The Aston Martin DB7 GT brings grand-tourer style, while the Nissan Patrol gives off-road fans another large, capable machine to tune. The Toyota Prius is a fun left turn, and the Honda Z GT should appeal to players who enjoy smaller, lighter cars rather than chasing horsepower every week.
Premium Edition owners also get the Italian Passion Car Pack. The Ferrari F80, Alfa Romeo Giulia GTAm, Alfa Romeo SE Group C racer, and Ferrari 275 GTB/4 Spider cover several eras, from modern performance to classic racing heritage. That's a much more interesting pack than four near-identical supercars.
Used Car Dealership Changes the Grind
The Used Car Dealership near the stadium may become the update's quiet star. Cars once tied almost entirely to Wheelspins can now appear as discounted rare stock. There's still randomness involved, sure, but at least you're checking a shop with a clear purpose instead of burning spins and hoping for a miracle.
Keep an eye on the dealership whenever you log in. Stock rotates, prices can be surprisingly friendly, and a car that looked impossible to obtain last month might suddenly sit there waiting for credits.
Auction House Prices Get Uncapped
Removing price caps from non-Autoshow vehicles is a major economic shift. Rare cars can now move closer to their real market value, which should persuade more owners to list them. That matters because desirable vehicles often vanish from the Auction House in seconds, leaving buyers refreshing the screen with nothing to show for it.
There's a trade-off, naturally. Popular cars may become expensive when demand spikes, while sellers with genuinely rare stock can earn far more. The useful part is visibility. More listings should mean fewer private hoards and a better chance of finding the exact car you want.
1. Check recent sales before listing valuable cars.
2. Avoid panic-buying during event reward drops.
3. Compare several listings before spending heavily.
Cleaner Competition and Better Creative Tools
Playground Games has also targeted several long-running annoyances. XP and credit exploits have reportedly been closed, AI behaviour is receiving more tuning, and the Rivals leaderboards have been reset. That reset is important. Old exploit times and questionable tyre records no longer define the top spots, so legitimate drivers get a fresh shot.
EventLab creators gain more than 50 new props, seasonal decorations, Japanese-inspired assets, and extra colour options. These additions won't change the driving model, but they can completely change the feel of a custom route. A good builder can now make a location look less like a test track and more like a proper event.
Series 3 Rewards at a Glance
Here's the quick version for players planning their month around the most useful unlocks.
| Reward route | Main highlights |
|---|---|
| Series points | Lamborghini Temerario and Ferrari 296 GTB |
| Weekly seasons | Pantera GT5, Lancia 037 Stradale, Pagani Huayra R |
| Car Pass | DB7 GT, Nissan Patrol, Toyota Prius, Honda Z GT |
Series 3 doesn't need a huge flood of new cars to stay busy. The stronger economy, refreshed Rivals scene, and better access to rare stock give the festival more room to breathe. For collectors who want to expand quickly, Forza Horizon 6 Cars are becoming easier to track down as more vehicles enter circulation during the season.