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Forza Horizon 6, developed by Playground Games, drops you into Japan with hundreds of cars and a massive map. The game can seem generous at the start, but certain early-game mistakes cost you dearly. Here are the essential tips to begin the right way.
The default settings in Forza Horizon 6 aren’t optimal, but stripping every assist away too early is a common rookie mistake. Start comfortable and remove one assist at a time as your confidence grows. For the Driving Line, set it to braking and corners only rather than the full line. Leaving the full line on trains you to stare at the ground instead of learning how your car actually behaves.
Forza Horizon 6 also adds the Car Proximity Radar, AutoDrive and a customizable High Contrast mode. Use AutoDrive to roam the map freely in your first hours and switch it off the moment you start learning a race. Car Proximity Radar is genuinely useful in cockpit view and stays relevant even online. Keep ABS and traction control on until you’re comfortable with how your car behaves. Disable traction control last, only once your throttle management is genuinely dialed in.
Forza Horizon 6 runs two progression paths in parallel and many new players don’t realize this until several hours in. The Horizon Festival is the one you naturally gravitate toward. Every race completed pushes you toward the next Wristband, which unlocks new activities on the map. The second path is Discover Japan, more contemplative, rewarding free exploration of the map.
Prioritize unlocking Wristbands. Each Wristband opens new content like PR Stunts, hidden Street Races and other events. The earlier you unlock, the faster progression compounds. Participate in as many different events as possible rather than grinding the same ones. And get into the habit of opening the Collection Journal regularly to claim your rewards. The credits, fast cars and Wheel Spins earned during events don’t land in your garage automatically: they sit waiting in that menu.
The Forza Horizon 6 map blends Tokyo, mountain roads, the coastline, rural zones and the snowy Japanese Alps. Playground Games describes it as dense and vertical. The best route is therefore rarely the shortest one. Don’t try to clear the map before you’ve unlocked all the progression systems. That’s the single biggest mistake that slows down the first hours.
Build a simple loop early on. Start from Tokyo, head out to the countryside, climb a mountain pass, then loop back to a Car Meet. This circuit exposes you to multiple surfaces without constantly swapping cars and generates XP with every kilometer driven. Fast travel is free in Forza Horizon 6, but driving remains the best way to progress. You’ll naturally come across XP boards, Speed Zones and Drift Zones without any extra effort. The full interactive map is available right below.
Photo Mode is far more useful than it looks. At the start of every race, enter Photo Mode via the D-pad up and quickly snap every car on the grid with the RB/R1 button. Each photo is worth 10 points toward your next Wristband through the Horizon Promo feature. With over 600 cars available, this is a massive progression source most players completely overlook. The camera can also help you spot Treasure Cars or hidden Barn Finds in the surrounding area.
Rewind is a mechanic most players only use to correct mistakes. That’s too narrow. Use it also to immediately retry a Danger Sign jump without going back to the start, or to fine-tune your approach line on a Speed Zone and beat your record. Every house bought in Japan offers permanent perks like a free daily Wheel Spin or a credit boost on certain events. Invest in houses as soon as your credit budget allows.
Touge battles are one of the headline new features of Forza Horizon 6. Japanese mountain passes reward precision far more than raw power. Track memory is your best weapon. Here’s the right approach to tackling a touge:
In winter, brake earlier than usual. On dirt, avoid cars that sit too low. Keep a dedicated off-road vehicle rather than modifying your main sports car before every event.
The classic trap is over-upgrading your favorite car. It quickly becomes powerful but a nightmare to control. With over 550 cars available, the temptation to buy everything that looks cool runs strong. Resist it. Every car in your garage should have a clear role:
Don’t copy the first extreme build you find at a Car Meet. Look for tuning close to your current class. Test Aftermarket Cars before buying. A rare car is useless without a clear role.
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