Forza Horizon 6 is built to be fun on a controller but with a wheel it becomes a different game: smoother inputs, better throttle control, and a much stronger sense of weight transfer. If you own MOZA hardware, you can absolutely enjoy FH6, but you may need to spend a little time on setup especially while wheel support is still being expanded through updates.
This guide explains what “partial wheel support” means, the simplest setup path for MOZA wheelbases, and how to build a cockpit that keeps everything stable.
What “partial support” means in practice
When a wheelbase is partially supported, one (or more) of these can happen:
- Force feedback works but button mappings are incomplete.
- Pedal axes show up incorrectly or inverted.
- Multiple USB devices (wheel + pedals + handbrake) require a custom profile.
The good news: most of these issues are solvable with firmware updates, clean USB connections, and correct in-game mapping.
MOZA hardware in FH6: the simple setup route
- Update MOZA firmware using Pit House before launching FH6.
- Plug into dedicated USB ports (avoid hubs).
- Start on default FH6 wheel settings for your first laps—then tune one slider at a time.
- Create a custom wheel profile if you use multiple USB devices (wheel + separate pedals/shifter).
If you want the general FH6 wheel setup overview, start here: Forza Horizon 6 wheel setup guide.
Advanced wheel tuning: the settings that matter most
In FH6, the most impactful “advanced wheel” settings tend to be:
- Steering deadzone inside/outside (aim for a clean center and full lock access).
- Brake deadzone inside/outside (avoid accidental braking; preserve full braking range).
- Invert force feedback if the wheel pulls the wrong way in corners.
FH6’s official wheel tuning guides strongly recommend starting with defaults and learning what each slider does before changing multiple values at once.
If your axes are inverted on Steam
On Steam, FH6 supports adjusting axis mapping and inversion. If your pedals or handbrake are mapped incorrectly or flipped, you can fix it in-game. If you want the deep technical method, FH6 also allows editing the input mapping profile files on PC to override axis index and inversion.
For the practical approach, use our step-by-step guide: FH6 on Steam: fix inverted pedals and axis mapping.
The cockpit factor: why FH6 feels better on a rigid rig
Forza is often described as “loose” on a wheel when the setup isn’t stable. That’s not always the game—it’s often wheel flex, seat movement, or sliding pedals. A rigid cockpit lets you use lower FFB and still feel the car.
For MOZA wheelbases, these SIMGASM rigs are a great fit:
- Entry wheel builds: Hobby
- Most MOZA setups: Club
- Cleanest + most adjustable: Sport (internal cable passthroughs)
- High torque: Pro
Want a cockpit checklist specifically for FH6? Read: Forza Horizon 6 cockpit setup: monitor, seat and rig rigidity.
Recommended MOZA products for FH6
- MOZA R3 bundle (great entry option)
- MOZA R5 bundle (strong beginner sweet spot)
- MOZA R9 V3 (more headroom, more detail)
- MOZA HBP handbrake (drift + rally playstyles)
Continue reading
- Forza Horizon 6 supported wheels: compatibility checklist
- Forza Horizon 6 wheel setup guide: rotation, deadzones and FFB
- Forza Horizon 6 no force feedback: fixes for MOZA and others
- Steering angle guide: wheel rotation and soft lock
- MOZA R5 bundle setup: calibration and first rig build