TL;DR
- Controller Revision: Microsoft may be removing the older bottom accessory connector from the Forza Horizon 6 limited-edition controller.
- Launch Details: Official listings still place the $89.99 pad in the May 2026 launch window with USB-C and 3.5 mm support intact.
- Scope Question: Microsoft has not confirmed whether the missing port is limited to this edition or part of a broader Xbox controller revision.
Microsoft appears to be planning a move away from the older bottom accessory connector after a Forza Horizon 6 limited-edition Xbox wireless controller surfaced with the slot replaced by a sealed panel. Core connections still appear intact, so buyers are left asking whether the company is narrowing support for older add-ons on future pads.
Photos shared in May 2026 by Reddit user / buyer SpeedKomodo appear to show a newly received controller with a sealed bottom panel where older Xbox controllers exposed the legacy slot. The same images also appear to show model number 1914, which leaves open the possibility that Microsoft revised one run without openly renaming the device.
Microsoft still has not clarified whether the missing connector belongs only to this edition or to a broader refresh. As of May 20, the apparent change had not surfaced on other Xbox controllers, leaving the scope of the revision unresolved.
Just got my FH6 controller and noticed something interesting
by u/SpeedKomodo in xbox
What the Forza Horizon 6 Launch Confirms
Microsoft is selling the limited-edition controller for priced at $89.99 as part of its broader Forza Horizon 6 accessories launch. Microsoft’s store listing says pre-orders placed through its storefront ship on or after May 19, 2026.
Retailer availability starts on or after May 21, which places the controller inside an active game-release window rather than a later stand-alone hardware event. Forza Horizon 6 also reached Game Pass on May 19, 2026, tying the accessory rollout directly to Microsoft’s current launch push.
Microsoft’s official launch pages stayed quiet on the underside change. Xbox Wire made no mention of a controller port revision, while the Microsoft Store still lists a compatible USB-C cable and standard headset support.
Buyer images also show USB-C and a 3.5 mm jack still in place, which points to a change in the older accessory connector rather than in charging, wireless use, or ordinary wired audio. Microsoft’s current launch materials still describe the controller around everyday functions while leaving the legacy slot in doubt.
Compatibility Stakes and Market Context
Accessory owners would feel the first real loss if the slot disappears on more than this one model. Microsoft has introduced no new expansion-port accessories in recent years, yet some players still use the older port because it keeps physical audio controls within easy reach.
Xbox Design Lab controller listings still show the older port for accessory support, which is why it remains unclear whether the port change applies more broadly. Older official imagery and a newly shipped special edition now point in different directions, so the present record still supports a reported claim rather than a fully confirmed redesign.
Mainstream controller use across the market already centers on wireless play, USB-C charging, and a headset jack rather than specialized bottom-port add-ons. Sony’s DualSense and Nintendo’s Switch Pro Controller compete in ecosystems that do not depend on this older Xbox connector, which makes the slot look more like a legacy feature than a modern sales driver.
An Elite Series 3 leak pointed in the same direction, but that remains an unconfirmed comparison point rather than proof that every future Xbox pad will lose the slot. Microsoft would need broader retail hardware sightings or updated official imagery before the current clue can be treated as a companywide design move.
Prior Accessory Context and What Comes Next
Microsoft’s older accessory decisions add background without settling the current claim. In January 2024, Microsoft published controller repair guidance for Xbox wireless pads. In October 2023, Microsoft also moved against unauthorized Xbox accessories, a dated backdrop for compatibility pressure around older add-ons.
Older accessory owners have the clearest reason to watch what happens next, because charging, wireless play, and 3.5 mm headset support still appear untouched. A Microsoft clarification, broader retailer sightings, or refreshed official controller images would provide the next clean proof point on whether this sealed panel belongs to one themed controller or to a wider Xbox hardware revision.

