Forza Horizon 6 guide for beginners: this is a simple plan for your first hours in Japan. The goal is clear. Join the Festival, read the map, choose useful cars and avoid wasted credits.
Key points
- Forza Horizon 6 launches on May 19, 2026 for Xbox Series X|S and PC, with Premium early access on May 15, 2026.
- The game is set in Japan and includes Tokyo City, announced as the largest urban area in the series.
- Progression starts with the player as a tourist, then moves through Horizon Qualifiers and Wristbands.
- Forza Horizon 6 announces more than 550 launch cars, Aftermarket Cars, Car Meets and an R class.
Forza Horizon 6 launches on May 19, 2026 for Xbox Series X|S and PC. Premium early access starts on May 15, 2026. This guide uses official information from Forza, Steam, Xbox Wire and Toyota.

Forza Horizon 6 Guide: Key Takeaways
- Finish the Horizon Qualifiers before clearing the full map.
- Keep a stable C or B class car while learning roads.
- Build a garage by role: road, city, dirt, touge and Time Attack.
- Test Aftermarket Cars before spending credits.
- Start with useful assists, then remove them one by one.
Forza Horizon 6 Guide Progression
Forza Horizon 6 starts you as a tourist. You are not a Festival superstar yet. Progression moves through Horizon Qualifiers, Festival entry and Wristbands.
Do not chase every icon right away. Unlock key systems first. You will save time, credits and car choices.
- Start Horizon Qualifiers as soon as they appear.
- Use the recommended car while learning handling.
- Finish early races without chasing a perfect tune.
- Pick one road car and one dirt-capable car.
- Return to the map for roads, landmarks and affordable cars.

Choose First Cars by Role
The classic mistake is upgrading one favorite car too much. It becomes fast, but hard to control. With more than 550 announced cars, that temptation will be strong.
Build a useful garage instead. Every car should have a role. For older handling basics, our Forza Horizon 5 starter article still helps.
| Role | Recommended type | Priority | Avoid |
|---|---|---|---|
| Road | Sports coupe or hot hatch | Brakes, tires, stability | Too much power |
| Tokyo | Agile B or A class car | Launch and braking | Wide hypercars |
| Touge | Light JDM car | Grip and steering | Heavy builds |
| Off-road | Truck, buggy or rally car | Suspension and traction | Lowered road cars |
| Time Attack | Track toy or R class car | Aero and consistency | Unstable tuning |

Read the Japan Map in Forza Horizon 6
The map mixes Tokyo City, mountain roads, coastline, rural areas and snowy Japanese Alps. Playground Games describes it as dense and vertical. The best route is not always the shortest one.
Make a simple loop. Start in Tokyo, leave for countryside, climb a pass, then return through a Car Meet. This teaches several surfaces without constant car swaps.

Win Early Tokyo Races
Tokyo City is announced as the largest urban area in the series. Forza.net says it is five times larger than Guanajuato in Forza Horizon 5. Think agility, vision and braking.
- Pick a compact or mid-size car.
- Upgrade tires and brakes before power.
- Read the mini-map two corners ahead.
- Avoid curbs if the car bounces.
- Keep clean lines on wide streets.

Approach Touge With Control
Touge battles are a major addition. Japanese mountain passes reward precision. The best method is simple: drive slowly first, then raise the pace.
- Run the road once without chasing a time.
- Remember hairpins, blind corners and fast sections.
- Reduce assists only after clean runs.
- Add power only if braking stays stable.
- Repeat the route in Time Attack to measure progress.

Handle Seasons and Surfaces
Forza Horizon 6 keeps seasons as a core feature. Japan changes in light, sound and conditions. Adjust braking distance, tires and risk level first.
Brake earlier in winter. Avoid very low cars on dirt. Keep one off-road vehicle ready instead of retuning your main road car every time.


Use Car Meets and Aftermarket Cars
Car Meets are more than show spaces. Official details say players can download tunes, grab liveries, join convoys and buy copies of cars they see there.
Do not copy the first extreme build. Look for a tune near your current class. Test Aftermarket Cars before buying. Rare cars still need a clear garage role.


Assists in This Forza Horizon 6 Guide
Forza Horizon 6 brings back known accessibility options. It also adds Car Proximity Radar, AutoDrive and customizable High Contrast mode. The right setup helps you read the road.
Start comfortable. Remove one assist at a time. For wheel setup basics, see our racing wheel setup guide. For PC access, our Xbox Game Pass PC overview may help.
| Option | Start with it? | Reduce when |
|---|---|---|
| Braking line | Yes | You know corners |
| ABS | Yes if needed | Braking is progressive |
| Traction control | Yes in fast classes | Throttle is controlled |
| Car Proximity Radar | Yes in cockpit | Keep it online |
| AutoDrive | For exploration | Disable for racing |

Mistakes to Avoid
- Upgrading one car until it becomes unstable.
- Clearing the map before unlocking progression systems.
- Buying every tempting car without a role.
- Removing all assists too early.
- Using a wide hypercar to learn Tokyo.
First Three Hours Plan
- Hour 1: finish the intro and available Horizon Qualifiers.
- Hours 1 to 2: choose three base cars.
- Hour 2: drive a Tokyo, countryside and mountain loop.
- Hours 2 to 3: visit a Car Meet and test an Aftermarket Car.
- End of session: repeat a touge or Time Attack route.
Check availability on the official Steam page and the Forza website. The strongest approach is simple. Unlock systems, build a useful garage, then chase lap times.