1998 · TVR

1998 TVR Cerbera Speed 12

1998 TVR Cerbera Speed 12 sits on the official Forza Horizon 6 car list as a S1 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.

OfficialS1 ClassBase rosterS1 supercar tier
Stylized S1 class car illustration for Forza Horizon 6
S1stylized art · S1 class

Overview

1998 TVR Cerbera Speed 12 appears on the official Forza Horizon 6 car list as a S1 Class (supercar tier) entry in the base roster. This page focuses on what the car actually means for everyday players: how it tends to drive in its class, where it fits inside Forza Horizon 6's Japan setting, how to think about a starting tune, and which other roster entries it naturally compares against.

If you found this page while searching for a single TVR model in Forza Horizon 6, you are in the right place. Everything below is built around the official list fields (year, class, pack, manufacturer) plus plain-language player notes. We do not invent horsepower numbers, hidden upgrade paths, or unlock guarantees that the official list has not confirmed.

Background and Forza Horizon 6 context

TVR Engineering built the Speed 12 as a track-day road car using a 7.7-litre V12 made from two Speed Six straight-sixes joined together. Peter Wheeler famously could not extract the car from his driveway and cancelled the road-car programme after one full prototype, citing it as 'undrivable for the average customer'. On the official Forza Horizon 6 car list this 1998 TVR entry sits in the S1 Class (supercar tier) bracket inside the base roster, which is the placement players come to this page expecting to confirm against the public source. Inside the same S1 Class (supercar tier) bracket, the closest comparison roster entries for players are 1986 Audi #2 Audi Sport quattro S1 and 2009 Chevrolet Corvette ZR1, which is the S1 Class (supercar tier) peer group this car is usually weighed against.

Driving feel in Forza Horizon 6

TVR Engineering's Speed 12 was a track-day road car using a 7.7 V12 made from two Speed Six straight-sixes joined together. Peter Wheeler famously could not extract the car from his driveway and cancelled the road-car programme after one full prototype, citing it as 'undrivable for the average customer'. In S1-class events on Japan's longer routes the Speed 12 is the most extreme TVR ever built.

Where it shines

S1 class fits faster road events, longer point-to-points and online cruise lobbies focused on supercar showcases.

Tuning starting point

Tunes here often balance launch grip vs top-end. If you mostly run open road events, prefer a tune with steadier mid-throttle response over absolute V-max.

These are general starting points only, not a guaranteed competitive setup. Forza Horizon 6 community tunes that already have hundreds of downloads are usually a faster route than building from scratch, especially if you are not sure of the car's drivetrain or aero behaviour yet.

How to get 1998 TVR Cerbera Speed 12

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 S1 class

Other Forza Horizon 6 entries in the same class and similar era that you might compare against 1998 TVR Cerbera Speed 12.

Read next

More Forza Horizon 6 car pages players reading 1998 TVR Cerbera Speed 12 also tend to open. The first row shows other TVR cars; the rest are S1 class peers from different brands.