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Asetek SimSports Forte

18 Nm of Asetek industrial servo. The middle rung of the Danish engineering-led DD line and the Asetek base most serious sim racers actually buy.

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Asetek SimSports Forte

The verdict

If you want Asetek build quality at a torque tier that handles almost everything you would actually drive, the Forte is the right rung in the Asetek line. PC-first buyers shopping by value should compare against the Moza R16 V2 and Simucube 2 Sport first.

Best for

  • PC drivers who want Asetek industrial-servo build quality at 18 Nm
  • Buyers planning to grow into the Asetek SimSports rim ecosystem
  • Sim racers who care about the engineering provenance more than the price

Not for

  • Console drivers — Asetek has no PS5 or Xbox license
  • Buyers shopping by feel-per-pound — the Moza R16 V2 is dramatically cheaper at the same torque tier
  • Anyone who wants the deepest tuning software — RaceHub is functional but not Simucube-deep

What it is

The Asetek SimSports Forte is the upper-mid rung of the Asetek direct drive line, sitting between the La Prima at the entry tier and the Invicta at the flagship. Eighteen Newton-metres of peak torque from the same industrial-servo motor architecture as the rest of the Asetek line, a 22-bit encoder, a 400 W power supply, the proprietary Asetek SimSports QR, and Asetek RaceHub as the tuning layer. PC only.

The Forte is the rung most Asetek customers actually buy. The La Prima is too small for serious work in heavier cars and the Invicta is overkill for almost everything most sim racers do. The Forte sits in the upper-mid sweet spot where you get the Asetek engineering at a torque tier that handles GT3, road, touring and most of the formula content without ever asking the motor to flatter the FFB curve.

Who it’s for

You are the right buyer if you specifically want Asetek build quality at 18 Nm. The Forte gets you the same industrial-servo motor architecture as the Invicta, scaled down rather than swapped out, and the build quality is on a level the mass-market consumer brands do not match.

You are the right buyer if you care about the engineering provenance more than the spec sheet. Asetek’s roots in industrial cooling show up in the chassis and the motor and the whole base feels like the kind of equipment that ends up in serious rigs for a reason.

You are the right buyer if you are planning to grow into the Asetek SimSports rim ecosystem and you want the right base to anchor it.

You are the wrong buyer if you race on a console. Asetek has not licensed any of their bases for PlayStation or Xbox.

You are the wrong buyer if you are shopping by feel-per-pound. The Moza R16 V2 lands at meaningfully less money for the same torque tier and the gap on raw feel is smaller than the price difference suggests.

In use

Eighteen Newton-metres on a properly-engineered industrial servo feels like the right amount of torque for almost everything you would actually drive. GT3, road cars, touring cars and most formula content sit comfortably inside the envelope and the FFB feels settled and detailed in the way that the Asetek line earned its reputation for. The signal at low forces is noticeably cleaner than mass-market 18 Nm bases — the same off-centre detail that the Invicta is famous for, scaled to a more sensible torque tier.

The 400 W PSU is the part of the spec sheet that matters more than the headline torque. Asetek-spec power delivery means the Forte holds its peaks under sustained load in a way that consumer bases at the same headline torque tier do not always manage.

RaceHub is the second part of the experience. The parameter set is functional, the documentation is workable, and Asetek has been refining the software steadily over the last two years. It is not yet at the depth of True Drive or Fanalab and that is the obvious trade-off in the Asetek pitch.

What to watch out for

The price-to-spec calculation against Moza on PC is unforgiving. The Moza R16 V2 lands at meaningfully less money for the same torque tier and the gap on raw feel has narrowed enough that most drivers will not notice it in normal racing. The Forte earns its premium on the build quality and the engineering provenance, not on the spreadsheet.

The Asetek ecosystem is narrower than Fanatec or Simucube. The in-house rim catalogue is smaller and third-party SQR support is more limited than what you get on the more established platforms.

There is no console route. None.

Verdict

If you specifically want Asetek industrial-servo build quality at the torque tier that handles almost everything most sim racers actually drive, the Forte is the rung. Of the three Asetek bases this is the one most serious sim racers should buy.

If you are shopping by raw value at 18 Nm, the Moza R16 V2 is the rational pick.

If you want True Drive software depth, buy a Simucube 2 Sport or 3 Sport instead.

If you race on a console, Asetek has nothing for you.

What the experts say

Reviewer evidence

Quotes and footage from independent and affiliate reviewers, weighted by trust tier.

"Asetek is the engineer's brand. The hardware is some of the most over-built in the category and the build quality is genuinely on a different level, but the price has never been the strong point and the software is not yet at the depth of True Drive or Fanalab."

Richard Baxter

simracingcockpit.gg Asetek coverage frames the brand as engineering-led specialists whose case is build quality and motor architecture rather than value or software depth.

Source ↗
Independent

Under the hood

Specifications, in plain English

Peak torque
18 Nm
upper-mid — what most serious sim drivers settle on
Encoder resolution
22-bit
22-bit encoder, the highest resolution on the market
PSU
400 W
Quick release
Asetek SimSports QR

Buyer questions

People also ask

Real questions from Google, Reddit and YouTube comments. Answered directly.

Asetek Forte vs Asetek La Prima — is the upgrade worth it?

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Yes, for almost any serious sim racer. The Forte's 18 Nm of peak torque and 400 W PSU genuinely change what cars you can comfortably race against the La Prima's 12 Nm. The La Prima exists for buyers who specifically need the cheapest possible Asetek entry. The Forte is the rung most Asetek customers actually buy.

Asetek Forte vs Moza R16 V2 — which should I buy?

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Different ends of the value spectrum at the same upper-mid torque tier. The Moza R16 V2 wins decisively on price and on the breadth of the Moza ecosystem above it. The Forte wins on the Asetek industrial-servo motor architecture and the build quality that comes with it. If raw value matters most, Moza. If you specifically want the Asetek engineering at 18 Nm, Forte.

Does it work on PS5 or Xbox?

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No. Asetek has not licensed any of their bases for PlayStation or Xbox. PC only.

What software does it use?

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Asetek RaceHub is the tuning layer on PC. Functional and improving but not yet at the depth of True Drive or Fanalab. The community library of starting points across major sims is smaller than what you get on the more established Simucube and Fanatec platforms.

Is the build quality really that different?

+

Yes. Asetek's roots are in industrial liquid cooling for data centres and the SimSports motor architecture shows it. The chassis is over-built compared to anything mass-market in the same torque tier and the motor itself is closer to industrial-spec than to consumer-spec. Whether that justifies the premium depends on whether the build quality specifically matters to you.

Straight from Asetek SimSports

Official resources

Compare with

Other bases worth a look

Side-by-side

Compare the Asetek SimSports Forte head-to-head

Sources

  1. Asetek SimSports ReviewRichard Baxter · unknowncaptured 2026-04-09
  2. Forte 18 Nm Direct Drive WheelbaseAsetek · unknowncaptured 2026-04-09