Forza Horizon 6 hides some of its best details away from the racing line. A few are obvious anime tributes, while others sit quietly inside car interiors, shop entrances, rice fields, and story dialogue.
Here are the best confirmed Forza Horizon 6 Easter eggs, where to find them, and whether they unlock anything.
1. Fujiwara Tofu Shop
Where: Shimanoyama, near the Bandai Azuma Skyline
Reference: Initial D
Reward: None
The Fujiwara Tofu Shop is the clearest Initial D nod in FH6. The building mirrors the family shop tied to Takumi Fujiwara, and the nearby mountain roads complete the scene.
Bring an AE86, park outside, and switch to Photo Mode. It fits perfectly with the game’s Touge Battle routes, especially at night.
2. AE86 Water Cup
Where: Inside the Toyota Sprinter Trueno Forza Edition
Reference: Takumi’s tofu-delivery training
Reward: No extra reward
Switch to cockpit view and look near the dashboard vents. A cup of water sits inside the car and moves whenever you brake, turn, or throw the AE86 into a corner.
The joke is that it never spills. The animated cup quickly became one of FH6’s most talked-about hidden car details.
In Initial D, Takumi learns smooth driving by delivering tofu with a cup of water in the car. FH6 turns that famous scene into an interactive detail.
The Forza Edition AE86 comes through Discover Japan progression. When that campaign route is holding up your collection, FH6 personal account progression offers an optional way to move it forward, although the standard unlock remains available.
3. Giant Mechs
Where: Story and Showcase-style content
Reference: Japanese anime and sci-fi
Reward: Normal event rewards
The giant mechs are impossible to miss once the event begins. FH6 puts full-sized robots into the action and lets you race alongside them.
It is more of a surprise spectacle than hidden prop, but the game fully commits to the idea. Sadly, there is no mech garage slot.
4. “Snap Them All”
Where: Photography-related dialogue
Reference: Pokémon and Pokémon Snap
Reward: None
During one photography sequence, the characters tell you to “snap them all.”
The wording is obvious, and the follow-up joke makes the Pokémon reference even clearer. There is no themed car or hidden creature behind it; the Easter egg lives entirely in the dialogue.
5. Tanbo Launch Rice-Field Art
Where: Rice fields near Tanbo Launch
Reference: Japanese rice-paddy artwork
Reward: None
The fields near Tanbo Launch hide a large design with Horizon branding and Mount Fuji-style imagery. It is much easier to see when the paddies are dry.
For the best view:
- Approach from higher ground.
- Use the nearby jump.
- Look down while airborne.
- Open Photo Mode.
Even after you reveal the main FH6 map icons, environmental details like this still need to be found by exploring.
6. The 365 Store Chime
Where: Outside 365 convenience stores
Reference: Japanese konbini culture
Reward: None
Park near a 365 store entrance, lower the radio, and listen. A short door chime plays from the shop.
It is easy to miss with a loud engine, but it adds a believable touch to the map. The same attention to Japanese car culture appears around the Daikoku-style parking area.
7. Returning Horizon Rivals
Where: Early Wristband progression
Reference: The original Forza Horizon
Reward: Standard progression rewards
Zaki Malik and Ramona Cravache return as quiet callbacks to the first Horizon game.
Long-time players may remember Zaki with the Lexus LFA and Ramona with the Ford Raptor. FH6 does not explain the reference, so newer players may not realise they are returning characters.
8. Koenigsegg Jesko G-Force Display
Where: Inside the Koenigsegg Jesko
Reference: Real vehicle technology
Reward: None
The Jesko includes a working G-force display inside the cockpit. It reacts as you accelerate, brake, and corner.
This is more hidden car detail than pop-culture reference, but it is still worth seeing. Open Forzavista and test it during a fast run.
Do Easter Eggs Give Rewards?
Most do not. The tofu shop, water cup, store chime, returning rivals, rice-field art, and Pokémon jokes are there for fun.
The giant mech event has regular event rewards, while the AE86 itself is tied to Discover Japan progression. Finding the Easter egg does not unlock an extra car, achievement, or Credit payout.
Collect more FH6 cars and uncover their secrets:
Conclusion
The AE86 water cup is the best Easter egg in FH6, while the Fujiwara Tofu Shop is the strongest location-based reference.
The smaller touches matter too. Giant mechs, store chimes, hidden dialogue, rice-field artwork, returning rivals, and cockpit details give the Japan map more personality once you slow down and look around.
FAQs
What Is the Best Easter Egg in Forza Horizon 6?
The animated water cup inside the Toyota AE86 Forza Edition stands out because it recreates Takumi Fujiwara’s training from Initial D.
Where Is the Fujiwara Tofu Shop?
It is in Shimanoyama, close to the Bandai Azuma Skyline.
Does the AE86 Water Cup Spill?
No. The water moves with the car but stays inside the cup.
Do FH6 Easter Eggs Give Rewards?
Most do not. They are mainly hidden references, sounds, jokes, and environmental details.
Can the Treasure Map Reveal Easter Eggs?
No. It reveals supported collectibles and map markers, but hidden sounds, interiors, dialogue, and visual references still need to be found manually.

