Forza Motorsport on the Game Boy and Game Boy Color brings the popular racing series into a portable form. The handheld release adapts the core ideas of the Forza brand into a smaller package built around quick races, car collection, and tight corner handling. Players pick from a roster of licensed vehicles, tune basic stats like grip and acceleration, then take to a series of tracks rendered in colorful pixel art. The game uses a top-down and behind-the-car camera blend, which keeps the action readable on the small screen while still giving a sense of speed. What sets this version apart is how the developers compressed full sim racing concepts, such as tire wear and weight transfer, into simple meters that respond to the d-pad. The result feels closer to a pocket arcade racer with deeper systems than most handheld titles of its era. Casual players can enjoy short bursts of racing, while fans of the series can dig into setup options for each car. The portable build runs smoothly on both original Game Boy and Game Boy Color hardware.
Updated: Jun 22, 2026
Screenshots

4 MB · GB / GBC ROMs
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Specifications
| Platform | GB / GBC ROMs |
|---|---|
| Genre | Racing |
| File Size | 4 MB |
| Developer | Turn 10 Studios |
| Updated | Jun 22, 2026 |
Overview
Forza Motorsport on the Game Boy and Game Boy Color brings the popular racing series into a portable form. The handheld release adapts the core ideas of the Forza brand into a smaller package built around quick races, car collection, and tight corner handling. Players pick from a roster of licensed vehicles, tune basic stats like grip and acceleration, then take to a series of tracks rendered in colorful pixel art. The game uses a top-down and behind-the-car camera blend, which keeps the action readable on the small screen while still giving a sense of speed. What sets this version apart is how the developers compressed full sim racing concepts, such as tire wear and weight transfer, into simple meters that respond to the d-pad. The result feels closer to a pocket arcade racer with deeper systems than most handheld titles of its era. Casual players can enjoy short bursts of racing, while fans of the series can dig into setup options for each car. The portable build runs smoothly on both original Game Boy and Game Boy Color hardware.
The game offers several modes to keep players busy on the go. Career mode runs through a tiered championship where you start with a basic hatchback and work your way up to supercars by winning prize money and trophies. Quick Race lets you jump into any available track with a chosen car, while Time Attack challenges players to set personal bests across daily ghost runs. A link cable multiplayer option supports head to head racing for two players, with each player using their own cartridge for fair vehicle access. The progression system rewards consistent finishes with credits, which can be spent on new cars, paint jobs, and parts like turbos, suspension kits, and tires. Tracks span twelve circuits set in locations modeled after real world venues, plus four hidden routes that appear after clearing the championship. The audio team packed in punchy engine samples and short victory tunes that fit the handheld speaker well. The overall experience delivers a deep racing package for a system better known for platformers and puzzles.