- Forza Horizon 6 leaked online via Steam before release.
- Unencrypted game files were mistakenly uploaded by developers.
- Screenshots and gameplay footage are circulating widely online.
Forza Horizon 6 has been leaked online ahead of its official May 19 release date, after Playground Games apparently uploaded an unencrypted version of the game on Steam. The oversight allowed users to access the game’s files, crack them, and distribute them across the internet well before the title’s scheduled launch.
The leak was first spotted on the r/CrackWatch subreddit, and it did not take long for the files to spread widely. Screenshots and videos from the game began circulating shortly after.
How Did The Forza Horizon 6 Leak Happen?
The situation appears to stem from a basic but significant error on the developer’s end. Playground Games seemingly pushed an unencrypted build of the game to Steam, which made it accessible to those who knew where to look. TheGamer confirmed the files exist, though the outlet chose not to share them.
It is worth noting that the game does not function online in its current leaked state, though that has not stopped people from playing through it. An online fix is expected to surface at some point.
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Crack hosting sites, which typically refuse to post pre-release leaks, are unlikely to make an exception here. That means the files are currently circulating on less reputable corners of the internet, and anyone looking for them should be cautious.
FitGirl Repacks, a well-known repacker of cracked games, spoke out against the leak: “Legit users who paid for their game deserve to play it first. Not the pirates. It doesn’t matter how much you hate Denuvo; those games are there because people buy something from developers and publishers. And when those who don’t pay get an Advanced Access while legit customers suck their fingers is just plain wrong.”
Pre-Release Leaks Have Become A Pattern In 2026
This is not an isolated case. A day before Pragmata’s April release, the game was already playable through the Hypervisor method, a newer piracy technique that has put Denuvo-protected games in a difficult spot. Tomodachi Life also surfaced online several days before its release, with ROM files dumped and playable on Nintendo Switch emulators.
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Each incident raises the same question: what does it mean to be a paying customer when pirates repeatedly access games before launch day?


