FH6 Help Center
Use this page when you know the problem you are trying to solve but do not yet know which guide or tool is the right next step.
This is usually a progression-order problem, not a bug.
FH6 event access is mostly tied to your current progression ladder and whether you are moving the right systems in parallel. If new event types feel delayed, the common problem is that you are pushing one track too hard while ignoring Wristband or Discover Japan progress.
What to do next
- Check your current Wristband tier before assuming the route is broken.
- Run progression content and side progression in parallel instead of grinding one lane only.
- Do not spend a whole session on tuning, drifting, or map cleanup if your next unlock depends on core progression.
Barn Finds in FH6 are tied to Discover Japan, not just main progression.
Most players assume Barn Finds unlock from normal campaign progress. In FH6, the limiting factor is usually your Discover Japan stamp track. If no new purple search circles are appearing, your Discover Japan pace is lagging behind your main campaign pace.
What to do next
- Stop treating Barn Finds like isolated collectibles.
- Push the Discover Japan track until the next barn tier appears.
- Once a new barn is visible, clear it together with Treasure Cars or road reveal in the same region.
The right first house depends on whether you need credit growth or garage discounts first.
A house purchase in FH6 should solve an economy problem, not just feel like progress. If you still need better race income, target the CR bonus route first. If you are entering a heavy buying phase, the garage discount path usually matters more.
What to do next
- Decide whether your next problem is earning faster or buying cheaper.
- Do not buy a house just because you can afford it this hour.
- Tie house purchases to your current progression stage and event needs.
The safest starter is the one that stays useful long enough to protect your early credits.
The best first car is not the flashiest launch pick. It is the one that lets you progress cleanly, avoids expensive corrections, and still fits your first real event cluster. Most early credit pain comes from fixing a bad starter decision with too many extra purchases.
What to do next
- Choose based on your next 5 to 10 hours, not your next 10 minutes.
- Avoid buying a replacement too early if the starter still covers your active event types.
- Use your next credits to stabilize progression before branching into specialist builds.
The problem is often setup direction, not just lack of grip.
Persistent understeer usually means the setup is not matching the car role, weather, or track shape. Adding more power or copying a random setup rarely fixes that. The first useful question is whether the car should even be doing this job before you fine-tune the tune.
What to do next
- Confirm the discipline and the car role first.
- Use the calculator baseline before chasing micro-adjustments.
- Fix one area at a time: tire pressure, differential, then suspension behavior.
Most players get the best return from stabilizing B and A class before spreading wider.
You do not need a garage that covers everything immediately. In practice, one dependable B-class car and one dependable A-class car solve more real event friction than a scattered garage full of half-built specialist cars.
What to do next
- Pick the bracket that matches your next event cluster.
- Prioritize all-rounders before specialists.
- Use rain-safe or easy-to-drive options if your results are inconsistent.
Use it when you know the car and discipline but do not want to start from a blank tune.
The calculator is strongest once you already know what role the car should play. It is not meant to replace car choice, progression planning, or event awareness. It is the bridge between stock confusion and a testable baseline.
What to do next
- Choose the right car before you tune the wrong one harder.
- Pick the discipline first, then use the output as a baseline.
- After two or three test laps, only change one area at a time.
Usually earlier than players think, but only if the purchase solves a real bottleneck.
The best time to stop farming is when the next purchase directly unlocks better event coverage, stronger income, or cleaner progression. If the purchase is just flashy, you are probably interrupting a good farm cycle too early.
What to do next
- Check whether the purchase improves income, coverage, or unlock timing.
- Delay prestige buys if they do not solve your current progression problem.
- Treat house order and class coverage as part of the economy system.