FH6 Autumn Playlist Strategies from U4GM
Autumn in the Horizon Decades playlist does not waste time. One minute you’re lining up a clean run in a 90s car, and the next you’re eyeing a Trial prize that is far too good to ignore. If you are short on FH6 Credits, this season also gives you a few easy chances to pad the balance while you work through the bigger rewards.
Daily Challenges
The Daily Challenges are simple enough, but a lot of players still treat them like they expire after one day. They do not. Each one sticks around until the season ends, so you can leave them alone for a bit and clear them in one sitting if that suits you better. That makes the whole thing less stressful, especially if you only jump in for a few sessions during the week.
There are seven in total across Autumn, and each one pays out 1 Festival Point plus 5,000 Credits. The tasks range from easy car-park moments to specific race wins, so most people will knock out at least a few without even trying too hard. You only need the right car for a couple of them, and even then the game is pretty generous about letting you build momentum once you’ve started.
Weekly Challenge Spotlight
The featured Weekly Challenge centres on the 1991 GMC Syclone, and you need to own it before anything else will count. The four steps have to be done in order, which is worth remembering because plenty of players rush ahead and wonder why the next stage has not unlocked. First, get in the Syclone and drive it. Then head to the Irokawa Quarter Mile Drag Meet for two runs, earn three Awesome Wreckage Skills, and finish by winning a Street Race.
If you do not already have the Syclone in your garage, there is an easy way in. It can be earned from the On The Trail Seasonal Championship, so that event basically doubles as your entry ticket and your Weekly Challenge setup. That is handy, because it means you are not stuck hunting around for a rare car before you can even begin. Once the Syclone is yours, the rest of the challenge is pretty direct and should not take long.
Best Seasonal Events To Target
The Autumn board is packed with the usual spread of events, but a few stand out straight away. The Trial is the big one. Driving in the 90s pays out the Lamborghini Diablo GTR, and that alone makes it the first thing many players will chase. It is locked behind a 90s Retro Supercars, A Class restriction, so you will want something quick, stable, and not too twitchy in traffic.
There are also a couple of easier wins if you just want Festival Points without much prep. The Bambo Bash Collectibles challenge is open to everyone and gives a Super Wheelspin, which is hard to argue with. The Tokyo City Food Delivery Seasonal Job is also unrestricted, and the reward is a Forza Link phrase that is mostly there for fun, but the points still count. If you want a clean run through the season, those two are worth doing early because they do not demand a specific garage setup.
What To Build Around
The theme this season leans hard on the 1990s, so garage choice matters more than usual. A good A Class 90s Retro Supercar can handle The Trial, the Mt. Fuji View Danger Sign, and the Nangan Turn Speed Trap without too much fuss. Then you can keep a B Class 90s car ready for the Cosworth Your While championship and the Kudarizaka Trailblazer. That two-car setup covers a lot of ground, and it saves you from swapping tunes every five minutes.
If you like collecting useful cars, the seasonal rewards are worth a look too. The Ford Escort RS Cosworth from the Cosworth championship is a nice addition, and the 1992 Mazda RX-7 from the F.R.I.E.N.D.S Horizon Drift event is one of those cars people tend to keep around because it just feels right in this era of playlist events. Play the season smart, grab the easy points first, and keep a decent 90s build ready for the stricter events. That way, when you’re chasing the last few rewards, you are not wasting time hunting for parts instead of actually racing. For players who want to stay stocked up between seasons, a few extra Forza Horizon 6 Credits can make the whole grind feel a lot lighter.


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