The racing community was sent into a frenzy this week after an unencrypted build of the highly anticipated Forza Horizon 6 was accidentally published to Steam servers. This massive 155GB repository, which includes the full game executable and DLC files, was reportedly accessible through a SteamDB token dumper, allowing the data to spread rapidly across piracy forums and social media ten days before the official May 19 launch. While the leak primarily affects the PC version, footage of the Japan-inspired open world, featuring a 1:1 recreation of Tokyo, has already flooded platforms like YouTube and Reddit.
Playground Games and Microsoft have responded with a “zero-tolerance” policy, moving quickly to neutralize the impact of the leaked files. In an official statement, Playground Games clarified that the breach was not the result of a standard preload error but rather an unauthorized acquisition of an internal build. The developer has already begun issuing severe penalties to any users detected accessing the leaked software, with reports surfacing of account suspensions that last until the year 9999.
Player reactions have been starkly divided as the community grapples with the fallout. While some enthusiasts have used the leak to share unauthorized performance benchmarks and celebrate the game’s rendition of Japanese car culture, many others are outraged. This frustration is particularly high among Premium Edition owners who paid up to $120 for early access starting May 15, as these legitimate customers are still unable to preload the game while pirated versions are already being played offline.
The penalties for interacting with the leaked build are among the harshest in the franchise’s history. Microsoft is reportedly deploying “franchise-wide” and “hardware bans,” which effectively bar a user’s entire device from accessing any future Forza titles or Xbox services. These measures are designed to deter players from bypassing server-side checks, even as some users attempt to remain undetected by playing the cracked version exclusively in offline mode.
Forza Horizon 6 is the latest entry in the flagship racing series and is scheduled to officially unlock for the general public on May 19, 2026. Set in a fictionalized version of Japan, the game features over 550 licensed vehicles and new event types like Touge Battles. Despite the catastrophic nature of the leak, the title remains one of the top-selling and most-wishlisted games on Steam, suggesting that the core fanbase is still waiting for the legitimate release.














