If you're filling out your garage early, the 1991 Nissan Figaro is a neat little pickup because it costs nothing and counts toward the wider FH6 Cars collection. The catch is the clue. It points you toward Tokyo, but that doesn't help much when the city is packed with raised roads, tight exits, service lanes, and bridge ramps that all look similar at speed. The Figaro isn't sitting proudly on a main road. It's tucked away in a small parking area near the southern edge of Tokyo, close to the bridge routes that lead out toward Daikoku Island.
Where the Figaro is hiding
Head for the southern Tokyo shoreline and use the bridge network as your guide. You want the area between the expressway exits and the two leftmost bridge spans that run toward Daikoku. Rainbow Bridge should be visible off to the north or northeast, which is a good sign that you're in the right zone. A lot of players drive straight onto the bridge and waste time there. Don't. The car is not on the bridge deck. It's down in a narrow, low-key parking lot just off the road, easy to miss if you're flying through the junctions in something quick.
Best way to narrow it down
The smart move is to slow the search down. Drive toward the southern ring road, line yourself up between the bridge structures, then start checking the smaller side entrances rather than the obvious ramps. If the streets start blending together, switch to drone mode. It helps a lot here. From above, you can spot the little parking area, the road curves, and the gap between the bridge supports without fighting traffic barriers or camera angles. Once the Treasure Car marker appears, set the route and let ANNA guide you the last few metres.
Claiming it and what you actually get
When you reach the lot, just roll up to the Figaro and use the prompt. There's no race, no fee, and no extra objective hiding behind it. After the short unlock scene, the car goes straight into your garage for good. Performance-wise, keep your expectations sensible. The Figaro sits in D Class with a 234 PI, a 0.99-litre engine, 75 hp, 106 N·m of torque, front-wheel drive, and a light 810 kg body. Its top speed is under 100 mph, and the 0-60 mph run takes over 12 seconds, so it isn't going to trouble anything serious.
Why it's still worth picking up
The Figaro works best as a collector's car, not a competitive build. It's charming, odd, and very Japanese in the best way, which makes it fit the map better than its stats suggest. You'll notice some understeer if you push it, and the weak launch means it feels lazy from a stop, but cruising around Tokyo in it has its own appeal. If you're chasing completion, hidden rewards, garage variety, or saving your cheap Forza Horizon 6 Credits for faster machines, grabbing this free Treasure Car is an easy win early on.