Day 17 since FH6 launched (May 19, 2026)Last roster check Jun 4

1995 · Nissan

1995 Nissan NISMO GT-R LM

1995 Nissan NISMO GT-R LM sits on the official Forza Horizon 6 car list as a B class entry in the base roster. This page covers how it tends to drive in its class, how to think about a starting tune, and which other Forza Horizon 6 cars to compare it against.

OfficialB ClassBase rosterJapan-linked JDM
Stylized illustration representing Nissan cars in Forza Horizon 6
Bstylized art · Nissan

Overview

1995 Nissan NISMO GT-R LM appears on the official Forza Horizon 6 car list as a B Class (balanced sport) entry in the base roster. This page covers how it tends to drive in its class, where it fits inside the Japan setting, how to think about a starting tune, and which roster entries it naturally compares against.

Background and Forza Horizon 6 context

Built so Nissan could enter the BPR Global GT Series, the R33 NISMO GT-R LM kept road-going DNA in name only. The single road-legal car required for homologation was a stripped, widebody R33 with a single-turbo RB26 and slimmer overall package than the racing version that followed it to Le Mans. On the official Forza Horizon 6 car list this 1995 Nissan entry sits in the B Class (balanced sport) bracket inside the base roster, which is the placement players come to this page expecting to confirm against the public source. Inside the same B Class (balanced sport) bracket, the closest comparison roster entries for players are 1984 Audi Sport quattro and 2001 Audi RS 4 Avant, which is the B Class (balanced sport) peer group this car is usually weighed against. The JDM tag fits the wider Japanese setting of Forza Horizon 6, where this make tends to be a focal point of cruise lobbies and theme nights.

Driving feel in Forza Horizon 6

NISMO GT-R LM was the BPR Global GT homologation special — one road car built so NISMO could enter the racing version. R33 GT-R basis, single-turbo RB26, widebody. In B-class events on Japan's longer routes the LM is the rarest factory R33 ever built; the chassis behaviour is closer to a BPR GT1 prototype than a road GT-R.

Where it shines

B class is one of the most popular brackets in the Forza community because cars feel quick but balanced. It works for Road racing, Street racing on shorter routes and most casual rivals.

Tuning starting point

Look for tunes that match how you brake. If you brake late, dial in slightly stiffer rear damping. If you trail-brake, soften the front anti-roll bar.

How to get 1995 Nissan NISMO GT-R LM

This car is listed without an add-on label on the official Forza Horizon 6 source, so we treat it as part of the base roster. Forza Horizon 6 launches on May 19, 2026, and before that date the public Autoshow may not surface every base-roster car yet — players asking 'how do I get this car, it is not in the Autoshow?' on Reddit or the Forza forums usually find the answer is 'wait for launch day or a post-launch update'. After launch, base-roster cars are normally available through credits in the Autoshow, Wheelspins, Festival Playlist rewards, or the in-game showcase that introduces new vehicles.

Rivals in B class

Other Forza Horizon 6 entries in the same class and similar era that you might compare against 1995 Nissan NISMO GT-R LM.

Read next

More Forza Horizon 6 car pages players reading 1995 Nissan NISMO GT-R LM also tend to open. The first row shows other Nissan cars; the rest are B class peers from different brands.