Cart Empty
Continue ShoppingForza Horizon 6 brings back one of the most satisfying progression systems from earlier games: the Wristband Career. This isn't some half-baked list of chores — it's the backbone of the whole campaign. You start as a total nobody, work your way into the Horizon Festival, and through seven increasingly tough wristband tiers, unlock faster cars, harder races, and finally the endgame at Legend Island.
There are seven color-coded wristbands in FH6 — each one is a tier in your Festival journey. They gate access to events and car classes, and earning them unlocks new challenges and areas around Japan.
| Wristband | Description | Gamerscore |
|---|---|---|
| Yellow | Earn the Yellow Wristband and join the Horizon Festival | 10 |
| Green | Earn the Green Horizon Festival Wristband | 10 |
| Blue | Earn the Blue Horizon Festival Wristband | 10 |
| Pink | Earn the Pink Horizon Festival Wristband | 20 |
| Orange | Earn the Orange Horizon Festival Wristband | 20 |
| Purple | Earn the Purple Horizon Festival Wristband | 30 |
| Gold | Earn the Gold Wristband and become a Horizon Legend | 50 |
Each band pushes you deeper into the Festival, requiring better performance, more points, and tougher vehicles to succeed.
Climbing through all seven wristband tiers in FH6 is a journey that tests your driving skill, patience, and strategy, and for players looking to accelerate their progress, platforms like U4N offer convenient options to purchase FH6 credits for sale, giving you the freedom to unlock cars, upgrades, and events faster while fully enjoying everything the Festival has to offer.

Earning wristbands isn't as simple as just driving races.
You fill your wristband progress by:
These actions earn progress toward the next tier's threshold.
Once you've got enough points, you don't auto level up. You must then complete a Wristband Event — a special gate-keeper race or challenge — to claim the next band.
These events come in two flavors:
They're designed to test your mastery of the skills you've been grinding up to that point.
After you finish any Festival race for the first time, the Race Customizer opens for that track. You can replay that race later with any car you own, tweak weather, laps, AI count, and more. It turns old events into tools for progression if you want to grind your wristband faster or just play them how you want.
One of the biggest changes in FH6 is how the wristbands control your ride choices. Early tiers force you to use slower cars and specific classes — you can't just toss a hypercar into an entry-level race and expect to win.
A big checkpoint for many players is when the Hypercar cap drops — you only get access to Hypercar events after the Purple Wristband. Before that, you're tuning and racing lower-class machines, which actually makes the ride feel more satisfying rather than just burning through with a top-tier car early.
Once you've earned all seven wristbands, you hit the peak of the Festival system and become a Horizon Legend.
That unlocks Legend Island — a gated endgame zone you can only reach at Gold. It has:
The difference here is massive. It's not just another race — it's a proper destination with new content that feels like a reward for all the grind you put in to reach it.
The U4N Editorial Team is made up of dedicated gamers and technical experts. We're not just a trusted marketplace for game assets—we're all about empowering players with top-tier, expert-driven content. Our team produces in-depth guides, strategies, and technical fixes for some of the biggest games out there, like MLB The Show 26, Aion 2, Forza Horizon 6, Arc Raiders, and Path of Exile.
Whether it's mastering market flipping in Diamond Dynasty or optimizing your endgame builds, all of our strategies are tested and proven by in-house experts. At U4N, we don't just follow the meta—we help you stay ahead of it.