Where to Find FH Cars: Nissan Figaro Guide | u4gm

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Find the 1991 Nissan Figaro Treasure Car in Forza Horizon 6 with the exact Tokyo parking lot location, quick route tips, and a clear look at its stats and collector value.

The 1991 Nissan Figaro is one of those FH6 Cars that you don't chase because it's fast. You chase it because the game drops a vague photo clue, points you at Tokyo, and basically says, "Go on then, work it out." The good news is that the Figaro isn't buried miles out in the countryside. It's hiding in the southern part of metropolitan Tokyo, close to the bridge routes that lead toward Daikoku Island. The bad news? That area is packed with roads, ramps, curves, and awkward sightlines, so driving around at random gets old very quickly.

Quick Route Notes

  • Head for the southern edge of Tokyo, near the expressway exits.
  • Use Rainbow Bridge as your main visual check, especially when looking north or northeast.
  • Stay between the two left-side bridge spans that lead toward Daikoku Island.
  • Do not search on the bridge itself; the car is down in a small parking area.
  • Switch to drone mode if the road layout starts messing with your sense of direction.

Exact Spot and How to Recognise It

The Figaro sits in a narrow parking lot just off the main road, tucked between southern bridge structures rather than parked in a flashy open plaza. It's the sort of entrance you'll blow past if you're doing 120 mph and staring at the skyline. Slow down once you're in the right corridor. Look for a tight access point, low roadside geometry, and a clean sightline back toward Rainbow Bridge. When you get close enough, the Treasure Car marker should appear, and from there you can let ANNA guide you straight in.

Clue.

What It Means.

Rainbow Bridge view.

You're facing the correct Tokyo shoreline area.

Daikoku bridge route.

You're in the right southern connection zone.

Small parking entrance.

This is the part most players miss at speed.

No bridge deck location.

If you're on the bridge, you've gone too far.

Claiming the Car and What You Actually Get

Once you roll into the parking lot, claiming the Figaro is simple. Drive up to it, hit the interaction prompt, watch the short unlock scene, and it's yours. No Credits leave your balance, and there's no hidden fee or timed challenge attached. As a car, though, it's more charming than useful. The 1991 Nissan Figaro lands in Class D with a Performance Index around 234, front-wheel drive, 75 hp, 106 N·m of torque, and a weight of about 810 kg. Its top speed sits under 100 mph, and the 0-60 mph run takes over 12 seconds, so yeah, it's not winning speed traps.

Performance Snapshot

Category.

Value.

Class.

D.

Power.

75 hp.

Drivetrain.

Front-Wheel Drive.

Top Speed.

96.7 mph.

0-60 mph.

12.606 seconds.

Why It's Still Worth Picking Up

The Figaro makes more sense as a collectible than a race build, and that's fine. It fits the Japan setting, it has real retro personality, and it teaches you how Treasure Cars work before the later hunts get trickier. You'll probably use it for relaxed cruising, photo mode, or garage completion rather than serious events. If you're planning a wider collection push, save your upgrades for stronger cars and only buy Forza Horizon 6 Credits when you're targeting builds that actually need the budget, because the Figaro's best value is that it costs nothing to unlock.

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