
Highly likely to return based on appearances in Forza Horizon 4 and 5; not yet officially announced for FH6 at the time of writing.
About the 2018 Lotus Evora GT430 in Forza Horizon
Modern sports cars layer real-world competition refinements onto road-legal chassis — bigger brakes, smarter LSDs, faster shift logic. 2018 Lotus Evora GT430 represents that lineage. Forza Horizon's physics model captures the weight transfer character that distinguishes machines like this from straight-line specials.
2010s saw turbocharging, hybridization, and active aero arrive at every tier. Lotus adopted these on the Evora GT430 platform with results visible in lap times.
In-Game Classification
2018 Lotus Evora GT430 sits in the Modern Sports bracket of the Forza Horizon car list. Class A is a competitive tier in Forza Horizon, and Evora GT430 can hold its own when the build avoids overshooting into S1.
The RWD drivetrain shapes how Evora GT430 responds to power and tire upgrades — every Forza Horizon entry rewards drivers who understand what their drivetrain layout means for weight transfer in corners.
Tags & Community Vocabulary
The Lotus Evora GT430 is associated with these community tags inside the Forza Horizon car community:
#EU #mid-engine #V6 #track
Where Lotus Sits in Forza Horizon 6
Lotus contributes a substantial slice of the Forza Horizon 6 vehicle catalog. The Evora GT430 fits into that broader Lotus lineage — every entry on the wiki cross-references its in-game class, drivetrain, and country of origin to help players plan their Festival Playlist garage. For a United Kingdom-built Modern Sports machine in the A class, this is one of the more interesting picks in the full 896-vehicle catalog.
Related Cars in the Catalog
- 2014 Lotus Exige S · Modern Sports · B
- 1997 Mitsubishi FTO GP Version R · Modern Sports · C
- 2024 Porsche 718 Spyder RS · Modern Sports · S1
- 1995 Porsche 911 Carrera RS 3.8 · Modern Sports · A