Forza Horizon three Hot Wheels Expansion arrives May nine – Xbox Wire

Forza Horizon three Hot Wheels Expansion arrives May 9

Forza fans, your Hot Wheels fantasies are about to come true! The 2nd Forza Horizon three expansion – Forza Horizon three Hot Wheels – arrives on May nine exclusively on both Xbox One and Windows ten PCs (Xbox Play Anywhere), and is included in the Forza Horizon three Expansion Pass. This expansion lets players travel to a brand-new location in Australia, a place where lazy Sunday drives are substituted by insane high-speed stunts on miles of looping, banking, giant iconic orange Hot Wheels tracks. Starring famous Hot Wheels vehicles like the Twin Mill, the Rip Rod, and the Bone Shaker, Forza Horizon three Hot Wheels promises an automotive escapade unlike anything in Forza history.

Tune in on May eight for our special world debut livestream of the Forza Horizon three Hot Wheels practice, live from Hot Wheels’ headquarters in Los Angeles, CA. The display kicks off at one p.m. PDT and we’ll be showcasing off an off the hook live look at this fresh expansion as well as behind-the-scenes joy, special guests, and more! Don’t miss it: www.slat.pro/ForzaMotorsport

Forza Horizon three Hot Wheels takes players to six fresh themed islands located off the coast of Australia; all connected by a network of Hot Wheels tracks – placed hundreds of feet in the air – featuring classic Hot Wheels configurations like loops, corkscrews, and more. This is stunt driving at its most extreme, where you can master tracks by performing brand fresh Hot Wheels abilities that make use of boost pads, high-bank turns, half-pipes, insane leaps, and even giant mechanical dinosaurs. If you’re looking to get creative, check out the fresh Stunt Interchange feature to modify stunt track sections and dare your friends to attempt them.

Explore the world of Forza Horizon three Hot Wheels in an all-new campaign, completing events on your way towards the ultimate stunt-driving test, an epic Grand Finale taking place on the massive fresh Hot Wheels Goliath circuit. Meet up with your friends and rival in online multiplayer racing on Hot Wheels tracks, or find out whose abilities reign supreme in a brand-new Playground Arena. Along the way you’ll earn twenty eight fresh Xbox Live achievements worth five hundred Gamerscore.

Get ready to explore the world of Forza Horizon three Hot Wheels in ten fresh cars, including several Hot Wheels’ world-famous vehicles, as well as a brand-new Barn Find just waiting to be discovered and restored. Here’s a closer look at the cars:

1969 Hot Wheels Twin Mill

When it comes to Hot Wheels, there is nothing more iconic that the over-the-top Twin Mill. Designed by Ira Gilford, who abandon his job at Chrysler to design cars for Mattel, the Twin Mill is a prime example of the kind of outlandish concepts that make Hot Wheels such a success story. A life-size, drivable replica was built in part by legendary hot rod designer Boyd Coddington with then upcoming car icon Chip Foose in charge of the build. It was finished by Barry Lobeck years later and debuted at SEMA in 2001. What the Twin Mill lacks in visibility from its detailed cabin, it makes up for in horsepower. Dual-blown Chevy five hundred two big blocks blast around 1,400 horses, making it one of the most powerful cars in Forza history.

2011 Hot Wheels Bone Shaker

Designed by “Mr. Hot Wheels” designer Larry Wood, the Bone Shaker is one of a handful of Hot Wheels deemed popular enough to warrant the creation of a real-life version. Built in two thousand eleven by Picture Car Warehouse, the Bone Shaker carries all the details of the original 1:64 scale model. The trademark skull face with mitts gripping the headlights make it clear that this is no run-of-the-mill rat rod. The small-block Chevy motor with headers and straight pipes was built to intimidate in both sound and spectacle. To display off the interior details and stay true to the original form, the top is open – albeit closed-top die-cast versions were also made. Inwards, creepy details like the skull-topped spine shifter and the skull-and-crossbones steering wheel pair ideally with the awesome flame-job on the outside.

Is it a buggy? It is a hot rod? It doesn’t matter what you call the Rip Rod because this diminutive Hot Wheels rail is ready to jiggle things up on any surface. This animal is tooled with a souped-up two-cylinder motor that makes better than one hundred hp. While that might not seem like much, in this rod, it is more than enough to thrill (or spill depending on your abilities behind the wheel). One look at the suspension tells you this tricked-out custom-built is ready for any terrain. This is a super lightweight tube chassis pro-built machine and it’s all Hot Wheels. In brief, the Rip Rod truly rips.

2005 Hot Wheels Ford Mustang

To feast fifty years of the iconic Ford pony car, Hot Wheels and specialty-builder Activity Vehicle Engineering commenced with a two thousand five Mustang and created this beautiful custom-built model. Featuring ample fender flares, the car’s oil-cooler lines are routed through the empty grill, and its dramatic (and adjustable) spoiler and rear diffuser all contribute to the look. The wheels are one-of-a-kind, built specially for this car. The purple and orange paint colors and carbon-fiber accents make this Mustang pop that much more. Ready for drifting duty or fit for tracking, this one-off build is as collectible as the 1:64 version it inspired.

What do you get when you cross a lifted Jeep Wrangler shod in 40-inch rock-crawling tires and a Hellcat seven hundred seven hp engine? While the reaction is fairly obviously the two thousand sixteen Jeep Trailcat, you may wonder why Chrysler has mixed some of their most hallowed DNA. In fact, the Trailcat was built to attend the two thousand seventeen 50 th running of the Easter Jeep Safari in Moab, Utah. In line with the design of the rock-crawling menaces found in King of the Hammers competition, the Trailcat was designed to clamber over anything in its path and sprint across open ground with wicked abandon. Since you won’t find this factory-built specialty for sale and, unless you are pals with the Chrysler design team, Forza is the only place you will have a chance to get behind this wheel.

When you only produce about one car per year and the interior alone can take up to 8,000 hours – that’s three hundred thirty three days – it’s ok to expect perfection. Zenvo, Denmark’s super car maker, does just that with an attention to detail you should also expect for a car that costs more than $1.Five million. Power and spectacle are on par with exotic supercar status with bespoke material via. In the nitty-gritty department, there is massive 6.8-liter V8 with a turbo and supercharger. That will get you to sixty mph in less than three-seconds and a top speed over two hundred thirty mph. Let the looks grab your eye, take it all in, then get behind the wheel to practice something truly special.

2007 Toyota Hilux Arctic Trucks AT38

Unless you are part of a scientific expedition or you determine to sign up for the Artic Trucks practice in Iceland, getting behind the wheel of this specially-fitted Toyota Four×Four in Forza is your foot chance to practice its otherworldly capability. Artic Trucks has been fitting out vehicles for the rigors of Icelandic driving since 1990. The AT38 model has been fitted with features such as oversize tires that are ready to tackle any terrain and an articulating suspension that has taken these vehicles as far as the North and South Poles. No matter where you point it, expect the AT38 to conquer any surface with authority.

The Zonda R is a bit of a puzzle. It’s essentially a racecar, and yet it’s not decently sanctioned for any particular racing series. At the same time, it’s not legal to drive on the road, particularly due to its earsplitting F1-inspired harass system. Furthermore, it shares only ten percent of its components with other Zondas with a bespoke naked carbon fiber figure, a different AMG-sourced V12 engine pulled from the Mercedes-Benz CLK-GTR racecar, and a gearbox sourced often found in LMP cars. It’s very likely best not to attempt to classify the Zonda R, and just simply to drive it, because doing so is an practice as unique as the car itself. From the straight-cut gear whine to the manic howl of the 740-horsepower engine, it makes all the right noises. With the massive rear wing and fully optimized aero package, the Two,500-lb. car can lightly reach one hundred mph in less than six seconds on its way well past two hundred mph.

1972 Chrysler VH Valiant Charger R/T E49

When Australian Minister of Transport Milton Morris called the E49 and its competition “bullets on wheels,” it was the death knell for the muscle cars from down under. Fortunately, the VH Valiant Charger in the E49 configuration was already out and all one hundred forty nine of them sold like hot cakes. With its mighty 265-cubic-inch slant-six with a racy cam and four-speed, the E49 set a production vehicle acceleration record that would stand for twenty seven years. Speed and rarity aside, the VH Valiant Charger represents the only car designed fully by Chrysler Australia.

In addition to the fresh Hot Wheels expansion, on May nine we will be releasing an update for Forza Horizon three which includes some significant improvements for Windows ten players. These switches include improved fresh support for numerous popular driving wheels, improved CPU spectacle, extra graphical options, and more. Look for the total list of all the improvements coming with the latest update on the day of release.

Forza Horizon three Hot Wheels arrives on May nine on Xbox One and Windows ten PCs. It is available now as part of the Forza Horizon three Expansion Pass or as a standalone purchase for $Nineteen.99.

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