Forza Motorsport 7 is not limited to running on one core. There seems to have been a miscommunication along the way. “Forza Motorsport 7” uses as many cores as are available on whatever system it runs on, whether that is a 4- to 16-core PC or the 7 cores available on Xbox One.
Hopefully, the developers can acknowledge this user feedback and fix the issue as soon as possible.
By playing the demo, though, it's readily apparent that while the average frame rate is not a problem at all, there is a lot of stuttering due to frame pacing issues. This immediately reminded PC gamers of early issues in Forza Horizon 3, which were eventually fixed with an update by Playground Games. In fact, several users noted that only one CPU core was being used to the fullest extent, while the others were relatively idle.
On the official forums, Turn 10's Community Liaison Soy confirmed that is intentional design.
Hello everyone,
Some users may notice that the game utilizes nearly 100% of one of their processor cores. This is expected behavior; we intentionally run in this manner so we can react as fast as possible in order to minimize input latency. Users on power-constrained devices, such as laptops and tablets, might want to use a Performance Target of “30 FPS (V-SYNC),” which will reduce processor usage and minimize power consumption.
This is certainly a strange stance to take for Turn 10. At least Playground Games eventually confirmed that frame pacing was an issue and they fixed it, too. If the game is to flourish on PC, then the developers will have to do the same and as quickly as possible, particularly since there's already a strong competitor in the racing simulation genre coming out today. I'm obviously referring to Project CARS 2 by Slightly Mad Studios, which was awarded a 9/10 score from Chris just a few days ago.
Forza Motorsport 7 is out on October 3rd, though customers who pre-ordered the Ultimate Edition will have "early access" availability starting on September 29th.