
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 1998 Mazda RX-7 RB Bunny in Forza Horizon
Modern sports cars layer real-world competition refinements onto road-legal chassis — bigger brakes, smarter LSDs, faster shift logic. 1998 Mazda RX-7 RB Bunny represents that lineage. Forza Horizon's physics model captures the weight transfer character that distinguishes machines like this from straight-line specials.
The 1990s were a creative high point for Mazda performance machinery — tighter regulations had not yet limited engine breathing, and tuner-shop culture was at its peak. Horizon's roster leans heavily into this decade.
In-Game Classification
1998 Mazda RX-7 RB Bunny sits in the Modern Sports bracket of the Forza Horizon car list. Class A is a competitive tier in Forza Horizon, and RX-7 RB Bunny can hold its own when the build avoids overshooting into S1.
The RWD drivetrain shapes how RX-7 RB Bunny 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 Mazda RX-7 RB Bunny is associated with these community tags inside the Forza Horizon car community:
#JDM #rotary #drift #FR
Where Mazda Sits in Forza Horizon 6
Mazda contributes a substantial slice of the Forza Horizon 6 vehicle catalog. The RX-7 RB Bunny fits into that broader Mazda 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 Japan-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
- 2008 Mazda MX-5 Miata · Modern Sports · D
- 1995 Honda CR-X Del Sol VTEC · Modern Sports · D
- 2009 Chevrolet Corvette ZR1 · Modern Sports · S1
- 2002 Chevrolet Corvette Z06 · Modern Sports · A