Rolling the credits after the Gold Wristband doesn't mean you're done with Forza Horizon 6. Not even close. Japan's roads still have a way of pulling you back in, whether you're chasing a cleaner drift line, saving up FH6 Credits for a dream build, or just cruising through the city at night because it feels good. The best part is that the game stops pushing you so hard. You can slow down, mess about, and start playing it your way.

Clear the Map Properly

One of the first things worth doing is checking how much of the map you've actually seen. Most players think they've covered everything, then zoom in and spot tiny grey roads tucked behind hills, alleyways, coastal bends, or mountain shortcuts. Driving every road isn't glamorous, but it's oddly satisfying. You notice details you missed during races, like quiet villages, service roads, shrines, tunnels, and those corners that are clearly begging for a drift car. While you're out there, knock down Bonus Boards and look for mascots too. Some are easy. Others are placed in spots that make you stop, reverse, line up a jump, fail it twice, then finally nail it.

Go Back and Beat Your Own Scores

PR Stunts are where the game starts to feel personal. Three stars are nice, sure, but they're rarely the real finish line. Speed Traps, Drift Zones, Danger Signs, and Speed Zones all give you a reason to tune one more car or try one more run. And yes, that usually turns into ten more runs. A friend beating your score by a few points is enough to ruin your evening in the best possible way. This is also where tuning begins to matter. Small changes to gearing, tyres, suspension, aero, or differential settings can turn a messy attempt into a leaderboard run.

Make Cars Feel Like Yours

After the campaign, the garage becomes its own playground. Some players spend hours building liveries from scratch. Others download community designs and tweak cars until they match a favourite movie, racing team, anime theme, or personal colour scheme. It's not just cosmetic either. A car that looks good and drives badly won't stay in rotation for long. Try building cars for specific jobs: a grip-focused touge machine, a ridiculous drag setup, a winter rally hatch, or a street racer that's more fun than sensible. That's when the collection starts to feel less like a list and more like something you actually own.

Keep an Eye on Weekly Content

The Festival Playlist is the reason many players keep coming back even after doing nearly everything once. Weekly races, seasonal stunts, treasure hunts, championships, and odd little challenges give the world a rhythm. Some rewards are easy to grab. Others take a bit of planning, especially if you're missing the right car or need a quick tune. Don't ignore EventLab either. Community-made races can be brilliant, strange, frustrating, or all three at once. You'll find tight city circuits, silly stunt tracks, off-road marathons, and events with rules the main game would probably never use.

Final Thoughts

There's no single correct way to keep playing Forza Horizon 6 after the main push is over. You might chase achievements, build custom events, race online, collect rare rewards, or just spend a night driving with friends and not caring who wins. That's the strength of the Horizon formula. A full garage of FH6 Cars gives you more ways to enjoy every road, every season, and every weird challenge the community throws at you, so the game still has plenty waiting after the big milestone is behind you.