What’s New with the Forza Horizon 6 Controller and Forza Xbox Headset?
The Forza Horizon 6 controller and matching Forza Xbox headset are Microsoft’s latest limited edition accessories, launching alongside the open‑world racer on May 19. The Xbox Wireless Controller – Limited Edition Forza Horizon 6 leans into a see‑through, festival vibe: a transparent cyan-blue top case with a metallic gradient, volt green and hot pink accents, a silver metallic D‑pad, and two‑tone rubberized diamond grips inspired by Japan’s touge roads. The back sports the Horizon Festival logo for extra flair. The Limited Edition Wireless Headset mirrors the same bright palette with a mostly white exterior, transparent cyan details, hot‑pink “HORIZON” branding, and racetrack graphics hidden inside the ear cups. Both accessories support Xbox Wireless and Bluetooth, making them usable across Xbox consoles, PC, and mobile devices. If you care about aesthetics and matching your setup to the new game, these are some of the boldest official designs yet.

Price, Preorders, and Where to Buy the Limited Edition Xbox Gear
Both Forza Horizon 6 accessories are available to preorder now ahead of their May 19 release. The Forza Horizon 6 Limited Edition Xbox Wireless Controller is listed at USD 89.99 (approx. RM430), with early discounts already dropping it to USD 84 (approx. RM400) at some major retailers. The matching Limited Edition Xbox Wireless Headset comes in at USD 134.99 (approx. RM650). Official listings are live at the Microsoft Store, Amazon, and Walmart, with some stores offering free delivery. There is also an officially licensed 8BitDo charging dock in a coordinated transparent design for USD 34.99 (approx. RM170), arriving slightly later on June 8. Stock may appear at different times depending on the retailer, so if you want launch‑day delivery, it’s worth locking in a preorder rather than waiting for shelves. Just avoid paying inflated marketplace prices while standard stock is still widely available.

Special Racing Features: Cool Looks vs. Competitive Advantages
From a performance standpoint, the Forza Horizon 6 controller is functionally close to a standard Xbox Wireless Controller, with the main upgrades focusing on comfort and style rather than competitive racing tricks. You get textured rubberized diamond grips for a more secure hold during long driving sessions, familiar Xbox ergonomics, and up to 40 hours of battery life. The Forza Xbox headset goes further for immersion: it keeps the core features of the normal Xbox Wireless Headset (including support for Windows Sonic, Dolby Atmos, and DTS Headphone:X) and adds custom sound effects themed around a Japanese V8 engine and the Forza Horizon 6 UI when you power on, pair, or mute. That makes the headset feel more tailored to the game, but it doesn’t fundamentally change in‑race audio like tire squeal positioning or engine tuning. In short, these are premium cosmetic editions with a few nice touches, not radically different racing tools.

How the Forza Horizon 6 Controller Compares to Third‑Party Performance Pads
If you care more about being the best Xbox racing controller on the grid than matching your livery, several third‑party pads offer stronger raw performance at similar or lower prices. The 8BitDo Ultimate 3‑Mode Controller for Xbox delivers Hall Effect sticks and triggers, 1,000 Hz polling on PC, multi‑platform wired and wireless modes, and a robust build at a mid‑range MSRP that often drops to aggressive sale prices. GameSir’s G7 SE wired controller undercuts the official pad significantly while adding Hall Effect sticks, a 1,000 Hz polling rate on PC, remappable back buttons, and swappable faceplates. At the high end, ASUS’s Raikiri II packs anti‑drift TMR joysticks, four rear buttons, two‑stage trigger locks, micro‑switch face buttons, and up to 1,000 Hz polling on PC, while Razer’s Wolverine V3 Pro combines Hall Effect sticks, multiple rear paddles, hypertriggers, and a sturdy wireless design tuned for competitive play. These options prioritize responsiveness, durability, and configurability over licensed artwork.

Who Should Buy the Forza Set—and Essential Buying Tips and Xbox Controller Deals
The Forza Horizon 6 limited edition Xbox controller and headset make the most sense for collectors, Forza superfans, and anyone who values transparent shells and festival‑style artwork as part of their setup. If you mostly want performance and Xbox controller deals, look at pads with Hall Effect sticks, high polling rates on PC (up to 1,000 Hz), and multiple back buttons for throttle, brake, and camera remaps. Models like the 8BitDo Ultimate 3‑Mode, GameSir G7 SE, ASUS Raikiri II, and Razer Wolverine V3 Pro often go on sale, giving you more features than the official pad for less money or similar outlay. To avoid scalpers once Forza stock tightens, bookmark official listings at platform stores and trusted retailers, enable stock alerts, and ignore third‑party marketplace listings that exceed the USD 89.99 (approx. RM430) and USD 134.99 (approx. RM650) MSRPs. There will likely be restocks—limited doesn’t always mean ultra‑rare.

