The Figaro hunt is a nice early reminder that Forza Horizon rewards nosy drivers, not just quick ones. Among the many FH6 Cars, the 1991 Nissan Figaro stands out because it costs nothing, yet the game doesn't simply hand it over. You're given a photo clue around Tokyo, which sounds simple until you realise how packed that part of the map is. Flyovers, slip roads, bridge ramps, tiny parking areas - it's very easy to drive past the right spot three times and blame the clue.
Where the Nissan Figaro is hiding
The Figaro is parked on the southern side of Tokyo, close to the bridge routes that lead out toward Daikoku Island. Don't waste time searching on the bridge deck itself. That's the trap. The car is down in a small parking lot, tucked between the southern road links, with Rainbow Bridge visible off in the distance. If you're facing the wider waterfront area and can see the big bridge line in the background, you're in the right neighbourhood. The exact lot is narrow and not especially dramatic, which is why it feels more like finding a forgotten commuter car than discovering a prize vehicle.
Quick route checklist
- Head for the southern expressway edge of Tokyo first.
- Use the bridge roads toward Daikoku Island as your main guide.
- Stay off the bridge itself and check the lower roadside parking areas.
- Look for a tight entrance between nearby bridge spans.
- Switch to drone mode if the street layout starts getting messy.
Parking lot clues and claim steps
| Clue | What to look for |
| Location type | Small parking area beside the road |
| Main landmark | Rainbow Bridge visible from the area |
| Common mistake | Searching on top of the bridge |
| Best tool | Drone mode for a cleaner overhead view |
Once you enter the correct lot, the Treasure Car marker should appear, and the rest is painless. Drive up to the Figaro, hit the interaction prompt, watch the short collection scene, and it goes straight into your garage. There's no auction trick, no timer, and no Credit cost. If you're nearby but can't get the icon to show, slow down and circle the lot rather than blasting through it. The entrance is small enough that speed can make you miss the trigger.
What the Figaro is actually good for
Performance-wise, be honest with yourself: this isn't a monster. The 1991 Nissan Figaro sits in Class D with a modest PI around 234, a tiny 0.99-litre engine, front-wheel drive, 75 hp, and a 0-60 mph time of just over 12 seconds. It weighs about 810 kg, so it feels light, but not quick. The handling is friendly at low speed, while the front-heavy layout means it'll push wide if you ask too much from it. Oddly, its off-road rating looks better than you'd expect, though I wouldn't build your whole dirt-racing future around that number.
Why it is still worth picking up
The Figaro matters because it adds flavour to your garage. It's quirky, very Japanese, and perfect for relaxed city cruising when you don't feel like chasing leaderboard ghosts. It also introduces the Treasure Car loop nicely: read the clue, study the map, poke around, and get rewarded for curiosity. If you're building a wider collection, saving your money for upgrades, rare cars, or even planning when to buy Forza Horizon 6 Credits makes more sense when freebies like the Figaro are already waiting on the map.
The Figaro hunt is a nice early reminder that Forza Horizon rewards nosy drivers, not just quick ones. Among the many FH6 Cars, the 1991 Nissan Figaro stands out because it costs nothing, yet the game doesn't simply hand it over. You're given a photo clue around Tokyo, which sounds simple until you realise how packed that part of the map is. Flyovers, slip roads, bridge ramps, tiny parking areas - it's very easy to drive past the right spot three times and blame the clue.
Where the Nissan Figaro is hiding
The Figaro is parked on the southern side of Tokyo, close to the bridge routes that lead out toward Daikoku Island. Don't waste time searching on the bridge deck itself. That's the trap. The car is down in a small parking lot, tucked between the southern road links, with Rainbow Bridge visible off in the distance. If you're facing the wider waterfront area and can see the big bridge line in the background, you're in the right neighbourhood. The exact lot is narrow and not especially dramatic, which is why it feels more like finding a forgotten commuter car than discovering a prize vehicle.
Quick route checklist
- Head for the southern expressway edge of Tokyo first.
- Use the bridge roads toward Daikoku Island as your main guide.
- Stay off the bridge itself and check the lower roadside parking areas.
- Look for a tight entrance between nearby bridge spans.
- Switch to drone mode if the street layout starts getting messy.
Parking lot clues and claim steps
| Clue | What to look for |
| Location type | Small parking area beside the road |
| Main landmark | Rainbow Bridge visible from the area |
| Common mistake | Searching on top of the bridge |
| Best tool | Drone mode for a cleaner overhead view |
Once you enter the correct lot, the Treasure Car marker should appear, and the rest is painless. Drive up to the Figaro, hit the interaction prompt, watch the short collection scene, and it goes straight into your garage. There's no auction trick, no timer, and no Credit cost. If you're nearby but can't get the icon to show, slow down and circle the lot rather than blasting through it. The entrance is small enough that speed can make you miss the trigger.
What the Figaro is actually good for
Performance-wise, be honest with yourself: this isn't a monster. The 1991 Nissan Figaro sits in Class D with a modest PI around 234, a tiny 0.99-litre engine, front-wheel drive, 75 hp, and a 0-60 mph time of just over 12 seconds. It weighs about 810 kg, so it feels light, but not quick. The handling is friendly at low speed, while the front-heavy layout means it'll push wide if you ask too much from it. Oddly, its off-road rating looks better than you'd expect, though I wouldn't build your whole dirt-racing future around that number.
Why it is still worth picking up
The Figaro matters because it adds flavour to your garage. It's quirky, very Japanese, and perfect for relaxed city cruising when you don't feel like chasing leaderboard ghosts. It also introduces the Treasure Car loop nicely: read the clue, study the map, poke around, and get rewarded for curiosity. If you're building a wider collection, saving your money for upgrades, rare cars, or even planning when to buy Forza Horizon 6 Credits makes more sense when freebies like the Figaro are already waiting on the map.




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