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Forza Horizon 6 wastes no time showing off why the garage is such a big deal this year. The launch roster is said to push past 550 vehicles, and while the easy-to-buy Autoshow selection sits closer to 392, that's only part of the story. A lot of the best stuff is tucked behind events, loyalty bonuses, special promotions, and the kind of odd little unlocks Horizon players end up talking about for weeks. If you're already planning your dream garage, the full FH6 Cars lineup gives a good sense of just how wide the selection has become, from daily drivers to rare collector machines.
Japan gives the car list a proper identityThe Japanese setting changes the mood straight away. This isn't just a new map with familiar roads. It makes the car list feel more focused. Toyota, Nissan, Honda, Mazda, Mitsubishi, and Subaru all get the kind of attention fans have been asking for, and that matters. A stock AE86 feels at home on a tight mountain pass. A worked Silvia feels right under Shibuya lights. Even something older, like the Toyota 2000GT, has a bit more presence when you're cruising through scenery that suits it. You're not just picking cars for lap times. Half the fun is choosing something that fits the road, the weather, and the mood.
Unlocking cars feels less like a shop runWhat helps is that the game doesn't lean only on credit grinding. Sure, you can still save up and buy plenty from the Autoshow, but the more interesting cars ask you to poke around a bit. Mei's Photo System is the standout idea. You follow visual clues, track down "Treasure Cars," and treat the map like a puzzle instead of a checklist. It's the sort of thing players will probably share in group chats, with someone saying, "Wait, I think I know that bridge." That small bit of mystery makes earning a car feel better than simply clicking purchase.
Loyalty rewards give veterans a head startLong-time Horizon players aren't being ignored either. Legacy Save rewards hand out some serious metal once you've cleared the opening stretch. Cars like the Lamborghini Centenario or the Corvette E-Ray can turn the early hours into something much more exciting, especially if you don't fancy crawling around in entry-level rides for too long. It's a smart reward system because it recognises time spent with the series without locking new players out of the fun. Newcomers still have loads to chase, while returning players get that little nod that says, "Yeah, we remember you."
DLC and rare cars will keep collectors busyThe garage won't stay still for long. Launch packs such as Italian Passion and Time Attack already point toward a busy post-launch schedule, and the Time Attack cars should appeal to anyone who likes ready-built, track-focused machinery. Add weekly Festival Playlist rewards, promotional oddities, and strange fan-favourite machines like a Fanta-themed Toyota Sports 800, and completionists have a real job on their hands. Some players will grind every challenge, while others may choose to buy Forza Horizon 6 Cars to speed up the collecting side and spend more time driving. Either way, the chase is the point, and FH6 seems built to keep that chase going for a long time.
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