2001 Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution VI GSR TM Edition
5Dirt Racing / Road Racing / Starter
Crimsonblod / cross-checked
Crimsonblod / cross-checked
Crimsonblod / cross-checked
PaperHeartZero / community-reported
Search copy-ready Forza Horizon 6 tuning codes by required car, class, event type, drivetrain, creator, and source quality. Every FH6 tuning code is community-sourced and clearly labeled.
Share-code candidates
22
Cross-checked
9
Setup-only builds
4
Generator reference
392+
Browse by playstyle
Most Forza Horizon 6 tuning codes searches start with a race type. These groups mirror how players decide which code to copy.
Beginner-friendly FH6 tuning codes for early progression and free starter car retunes.
7 codes
Top cars: Toyota Celica, Nissan Silvia
Forza Horizon 6 tunes that prioritize controlled oversteer and easy slide recovery.
1 code
Top cars: Subaru Vivio
FH6 tuning codes for loose-surface routes, rally stages, and mixed terrain.
6 codes
Top cars: Toyota Celica, Mitsubishi Lancer
Forza Horizon 6 tuning codes for AWD trucks, jumps, rough surfaces, and checkpoints.
3 codes
Top cars: Ford F-150, GMC Jimmy
FH6 tuning codes for asphalt racing, stable handling, and clean corner exits.
5 codes
Top cars: Mitsubishi Lancer, Nissan Silvia
Tune by car
When one car has several Forza Horizon 6 tuning codes, choose by event type before copying. This can later become /forza-horizon-6-tuning-codes/[car] detail pages.
Dirt Racing / Road Racing / Starter
Crimsonblod / cross-checked
Crimsonblod / cross-checked
Crimsonblod / cross-checked
PaperHeartZero / community-reported
Cross Country / Starter
Crimsonblod / single-source
PaperHeartZero / community-reported
Road Racing / Starter
Crimsonblod / cross-checked
PaperHeartZero / community-reported
Dirt Racing / Starter
Crimsonblod / cross-checked
PaperHeartZero / community-reported
Dirt Racing
Crimsonblod / cross-checked
Crimsonblod / cross-checked
Starter / Road Racing
PaperHeartZero / community-reported
PaperHeartZero / community-reported
Decision support
Forza Horizon 6 tuning codes are useful only when they match the car, event, class, and driving style you are actually using.
01
Choose the exact required car before copying FH6 tuning codes.
02
Match the event type first: road, dirt, drift, cross-country, or starter.
03
Check class and PI so the tune fits the race requirement.
04
Use drivetrain as a clue: AWD often helps dirt and cross-country, RWD often suits drift.
05
Prefer cross-checked records when you need reliability.
06
Test the tune before relying on it for rivals or leaderboard runs.
Trust labels
FH6 tuning codes can change, disappear, or be mistyped. Quality labels keep community data useful without pretending it is official.
The same tune appears across at least two public community sources. It is still not official or in-game verified by FH6Hub.
The tune was published by a creator or community post and should be tested before treating it as reliable.
The tune appears in one public tune database and needs another source or direct game verification.
The source has build settings or parts, but no confirmed share code.
Setup-only builds
These records are useful for Forza Horizon 6 tunes and future build guides, but they should not be mixed into the share-code database.
Setup Only
ForzaFire build page includes parts and tuning values, but no confirmed share code field.
Setup Only
Setup-only source suitable for future build guide content, not the tune-code table.
Setup Only
Setup-only source suitable for future build guide content, not the tune-code table.
Setup Only
Setup-only source suitable for future build guide content, not the tune-code table.
Sources
Sources are used for discovery and cross-checking Forza Horizon 6 tuning codes. FH6Hub writes original summaries and labels each record by verification status.
share-code-source
Structured community tune list with car, class, PI, category, drivetrain, creator, rating, and share code fields.
cross-check-source
Community tune detail pages with share code, creator, submitted date, description, and category tags.
creator-post
Creator-published starter tune post with multiple early-game share codes.
creator-post
Official Forza forum thread pointing to a public creator spreadsheet of FH6 tune share codes.
setup-only-source
Build pages with detailed parts and setup values. Useful as setup data, but not treated as share-code records.
calculator-reference
Tune generator and category reference covering 392+ cars. Useful for UX and classification, not a share-code database.
Tuning guide
The database answers what to copy. These guide notes help players understand why Forza Horizon 6 tuning codes fit an event.
Choose the matching car, open the tuning setup search, enter the FH6 tuning code exactly, preview the setup, then apply it. If a code fails, check spacing, car version, and whether the creator removed the tune.
Road Forza Horizon 6 tunes focus on braking, corner exit, and asphalt grip. Dirt tunes need more stability on loose surfaces. Cross-country tunes prioritize suspension travel and rough-land control. Drift tunes trade lap-time balance for controlled oversteer.
Tire pressure affects grip response, gearing changes acceleration and top speed, alignment shapes turn-in, suspension controls weight transfer, aero adds stability, and differential settings decide how power behaves on corner exit.
Most players who search for FH6 tuning codes want a fast answer: the required car, the right event type, and a Forza Horizon 6 tuning code they can copy. This page starts with a tune finder because a tuning codes search is usually a tool intent before it is a reading intent.
Source labels matter because community Forza Horizon 6 tunes change faster than official car records. A cross-checked FH6 tuning code has appeared across multiple public sources, while a community-reported code comes from a creator post or single public listing. FH6Hub keeps both useful, but does not call either official unless a first-party source confirms it.
The current database begins with public records from sources such as ForzaTunes FH6 Tunes, ForzaHub, creator posts, and setup-only build references. As more FH6 tuning codes are checked, the same structure can support per-car pages, best drift tune pages, starter tune pages, and detailed setup guides for long-tail Forza Horizon 6 tuning codes searches.
Next steps
Use the car finder to confirm class, access label, and source status before choosing FH6 tuning codes.
OpenCheck editorial META picks before investing time in a tune or build path.
OpenReview how FH6Hub labels official, cross-checked, and community-sourced FH6 tuning codes data.
OpenFAQ
No. FH6Hub lists community-sourced Forza Horizon 6 tuning codes and labels each record by source quality. Official Forza sources should be used for first-party facts.
Open the car tuning menu, choose the option to find tuning setups, enter the FH6 tuning code, preview the setup, then apply it to the selected vehicle.
A creator can update or remove a tune, a code can be mistyped, or the setup may require a specific car version. FH6Hub marks these FH6 tuning codes as community-sourced until checked in game.
No. FH6 tuning codes do not unlock or redeem cars. They apply a shared tune to the required car, so each card shows the exact vehicle that the Forza Horizon 6 tuning code is meant to use.
FH6 tuning codes are copy-ready in-game share codes. A setup-only build provides parts or tuning values for Forza Horizon 6 tunes, but does not give a confirmed share code to paste in game.
Start with the required car, then match the event type. Road Forza Horizon 6 tunes suit asphalt racing, dirt tunes suit loose surfaces, cross-country tunes suit jumps and rough terrain, and drift tunes prioritize controlled oversteer.