Blustery
Guest
Jun 16, 2026
1:41 AM
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Miss the turn once and the 1991 Nissan Figaro will make you feel a bit silly, because it's hiding in a place that looks ordinary from the road. That's the fun of it, though. This isn't a prize you grab from the Autoshow or a car you need to save FH6 Credits for. It's a Treasure Car, so the job is simple on paper: track it down, drive up, and claim it. In practice, Tokyo's stacked roads make the hunt a little messier than it sounds.
Where To Start Looking
Head toward the southern side of Tokyo, near the routes that run out toward Daikoku Island. That's the general area you want, not the middle of the main bridge itself. A lot of players go straight for the big bridge lanes and blast across them at full speed, which is exactly how you miss it. The Figaro sits lower down, tucked into a small parking spot beneath the busier road network. If you're seeing ramps, pillars, and overlapping roads, you're probably close.
Slow Down Around The Bridge Roads
This part of the map can be annoying because the GPS doesn't always make the height difference clear. You might be right above the car and still feel miles away from it. Don't keep chasing the fastest route. Drop off the expressway where you can, follow the smaller side roads, and watch for entrances that don't look important at first glance. The parking area is easy to drive past, especially if you're in something loud and quick.
Use Drone Mode If You're Stuck
Drone Mode helps more here than it does in many treasure hunts. From the air, the whole layout starts to make sense. You can pick out the ramps, dead ends, fences, and the little pockets of space hidden under the roads. Fly around the southern bridge connections and scan the lower sections rather than the open bridge deck. Once the Treasure Car marker shows up, place a waypoint and head back in your car. After that, it's just a short drive to the Figaro.
What You're Getting
Don't expect a secret monster. The Figaro is a D-Class oddball with a tiny 0.99-litre engine and roughly 75 horsepower. It's front-wheel drive, easy to manage, and fine for cruising through the city, but it won't pull hard on the highway and it won't scare proper race builds. That said, it has character. The rounded body, soft retro look, and compact convertible shape give it a different kind of appeal. It feels like something you'd keep because it makes you smile, not because it wins every event.
Final Thoughts
The Nissan Figaro is worth picking up because it adds a bit of personality to the garage. It's free, it doesn't ask you to complete a long event chain, and the search gives you a reason to properly explore a busy corner of Tokyo. Players building a varied collection of FH6 Cars should make time for it, even if it only comes out for relaxed drives, photos, or quiet runs through the city streets.
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