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Forza Horizon 6: Bounty placed on reckless rammer – players call for ghosting

Forza Horizon 6 players are calling for more consistent ghosting.
ⓘ Xbox Game Studios
Forza Horizon 6 players are calling for more consistent ghosting.
Frustration with rammers is growing in the Forza Horizon 6 community. A player on Reddit has now jokingly put a bounty on a reckless driver who sent him into the barriers with an unfair maneuver just as he was about to overtake. Many fans are now calling for more consistent ghosting – or a dedicated matchmaking system for aggressive drivers.

Forza Horizon 6 (here in Notebookcheck's benchmark test) has been well received by racing fans so far, but the behavior of some online players is proving far less popular. On Reddit, user u/cmccloud59 shared a video showing an opponent deliberately ramming him shortly before an overtaking attempt, causing him to lose control and crash into the barriers. He jokingly wrote: “I would like to put a bounty on this guy.” The supposed offense: “Being a bad loser / unfair ramming.” The user even named the player involved, while making it clear that no actual money was on offer.

The community largely agrees that while Forza Horizon 6 is not a hardcore racing simulator, players should not be rewarded for intentionally crashing into others to gain positions. One commenter even noted that the driver from the video currently tops the Spec Racing leaderboard, suggesting that the tactic may be working. Many players see stricter ghosting as the obvious solution. Such a system would automatically detect unsportsmanlike driving and temporarily make the offending vehicle transparent and non-collidable, preventing deliberate ramming attempts from having an effect. Forza Horizon 6 (Xbox version currently available on Amazon for around $70) already uses ghosting in certain situations, such as race starts or imminent high-speed collisions, but many fans want the system to intervene more consistently.

However, stricter ghosting is not without controversy. Some players fear that too much automation could make races feel sterile. If cars become transparent in every critical situation, some of the tension that makes close duels exciting could be lost. Another suggested solution is behavior-based matchmaking. Instead of placing all players in the same pool, Playground Games could identify particularly aggressive drivers based on their conduct and match them against each other more often. Clean racers would then be more likely to share lobbies with other fair players, while habitual rammers would end up in their own virtual bumper-car arena. Whether stricter ghosting, smarter matchmaking or a mix of both would be the best answer remains open. What is clear, however, is that deliberate ramming is becoming a growing source of frustration in the Forza Horizon 6 community.

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> Expert Reviews and News on Laptops, Smartphones and Tech Innovations > News > News Archive > Newsarchive 2026 06 > Forza Horizon 6: Bounty placed on reckless rammer – players call for ghosting
Marius Müller, 2026-06- 6 (Update: 2026-06- 6)