When people chase quick skill points in Forza Horizon 6, they usually lean on a fast car and a clean route, but this method has been making noise because it feels a bit more broken than that. If you've got the right FH6 Cars setup, the whole loop can turn a short run into a chunky pile of points, and yeah, that's why so many players keep testing it.
Why this EventLab route feels off
The trick is not just "drive fast and drift." It works because the EventLab layout keeps the car in a tight rhythm, so the combo timer stays alive longer than it should. That matters a lot. Once the Subaru 22B STI is fully perked out, it starts feeding skill gains in a way that feels way more efficient than messing around in free roam.
The other weird bit is the Skills UI toggle. A lot of players swear that turning the display off changes how the session is tracked on screen, or at least how forgiving the run feels. Maybe it's just psychology. Maybe not. Either way, the result is the same: fewer interruptions, smoother chains, and a much better shot at hitting those Super Wheel Spin nodes without wasting time.
Quick setup that actually matters
1. Use the Subaru 22B STI.
2. Fully unlock the skill tree.
3. Load a drift-friendly EventLab tune.
4. Keep assists from breaking the flow.
Reality check: if you spin out every 20 seconds, this method is dead, no matter how good the tune looks on paper.
How the run compares
| Method | Time | Skill Points | Feel |
|---|---|---|---|
| Free roam drifting | 10 to 20 mins | Around 10 | Messy |
| EventLab farming loop | 4 to 5 mins | 90 to 100 | Very repeatable |
The part players keep asking about
Someone in my crew asked if the skill display toggle is the whole secret, and honestly, that's what keeps coming up in chat.
Not really. It helps the run feel cleaner, but the real juice comes from the EventLab layout, the tune, and keeping the drift chain alive.
Why the loop keeps getting reused
After the run, players dump those points into Super Wheel Spin perks, then jump straight back into another session. It's simple, almost too simple. That's the appeal. You're not grinding random roads for ages, you're just repeating a short, controlled pattern and cashing in each time. For people who want progress without the usual drag, it makes sense.
What people miss when they copy it
They focus on the car and forget the little stuff. Throttle control matters. So does avoiding contact. Also, a sloppy restart kills momentum, which sounds minor until you've lost a good combo and have to start over from nothing. If you want the method to feel smooth, treat it like a rhythm thing, not a race.
Last thing before you try it
It's one of those setups that can get patched fast, so if it's working for you now, use it while it lasts. Keep your expectations in check, keep the run tight, and don't be surprised if the game changes the rules later. If you want to keep building out your garage after that, Forza Horizon 6 Cars choices will matter just as much as the farming route itself.