Forza Horizon 6: 671/671 Roads and Finding the Last One
Stuck at 670/671 Roads Discovered in Forza Horizon 6? Confirm the real count in My Stats, scan the map with the Fast Travel trick, and target the spots everyone misses.
The Horizon series has a long-running joke at the player’s expense: the map looks completely lit, the stats screen insists you’re one road short, and the game won’t tell you which one. FH6 keeps the tradition alive. The pain isn’t being stuck at 670/671 — it’s having no idea where that last sliver of grey is hiding. Driving around on a hunch just makes it worse. Here’s a method the community has settled on that beats aimless cruising by a mile.
First, confirm you’re actually short
Before you do anything, get the real number:
Main Menu > My Horizon > My Stats > Discover Japan > Roads Discovered
Read that figure, not the map’s paint job. FH6’s map-reveal radius is generous, so a region can appear fully discovered while a tiny road inside it never registered. The colour lies; the counter doesn’t.
One more thing worth checking before you commit hours to this: players report that the map-reveal accolade can complete without a perfect 671/671. So if your only goal is that accolade, open your accolades progress first — you might already have it and can stop reading here. Chase the full 671 because you want it, not because something forces you to.
The mouse-scan trick
This is the core method, and it works because of how Fast Travel availability behaves:
- Open the full map.
- Zoom in far enough that small roads are clearly visible.
- Sweep the cursor left to right across one horizontal band.
- Nudge down a little and sweep the next band.
- Keep your eyes on the Fast Travel prompt at the bottom of the screen.
- When the prompt suddenly drops or changes, an undiscovered or special segment is likely nearby.
The logic: discovered roads you can fast-travel to keep the bottom prompt steady. Hover over a patch that isn’t fully discovered and the prompt flickers or disappears. That break is your signal to zoom in and look for the missing line. The community has found this pins down a final stretch far faster than driving in circles.
The spots everyone misses
The road you’re missing is almost never a main artery — you drove those in the first hour. The repeat offenders are:
- Flyover and on/off ramps that branch off a highway.
- Tiny connectors under interchanges, tucked beneath the overpass.
- Very short city side-streets buried in dense urban grids.
- Car-park entrances that count as their own road.
- Stub grey segments beside mountain switchbacks that blend into the terrain colour.
Cities and interchanges are the worst because the map’s road colour sits close to the background — at the wrong zoom level your eyes skate right past a real road. Slow down and scan those areas at a tighter zoom than feels necessary.
Using community routes to clear regions
Some players build and share full route codes that cover a region’s roads in one efficient loop — handy when you’d rather sweep a whole area than scrub the map pixel by pixel. The community has put together coverage runs for the major Tokyo districts and surrounding regions.
A caution: shared route codes expire. Codes that worked last week may be dead today, so don’t treat any single code as permanent — search for current, working ones, or follow the route’s logic yourself. The method is the point: a player-made coverage line for a region beats wandering. If you’re already comfortable methodically sweeping the map for collectibles, the same patience pays off here — see the barn finds guide for that mindset.
My troubleshooting order
If I were down to the last road, this is the sequence:
- Check My Stats to confirm exactly how many roads I’m short.
- Mouse-scan the cities and interchanges first — highest hit rate.
- Then sweep mountains, ramps, and the map edges.
- Still nothing? Run a region coverage route to brute-force an area.
- After clearing each area, return to My Stats and confirm the number moved.
Never hunt by feel while driving. FH6’s last road is often so small it looks like a speck of dirt on the map.
Bottom line
Full road completion rewards patience, but method beats patience every time. A fully lit map does not mean every road is discovered — confirm with the stats screen, locate the gap with the mouse-scan trick, and mop up with a community route if you have to. That’s a far better use of your time than another lap around the map hoping the counter ticks up on its own.
Frequently asked questions
Where do I check my exact Roads Discovered count in Forza Horizon 6?
Go to Main Menu > My Horizon > My Stats > Discover Japan > Roads Discovered. Trust that number, not the map colour — a region can look fully lit while a short stretch inside it is still unaccounted for.
Do I need 671/671 roads for the map-reveal accolade?
Not necessarily. Players report the map-reveal accolade can complete without hitting a perfect 671/671. If you only care about the accolade, check it before grinding the last road — you may already be done.
What roads do people miss most often?
Almost never the main routes. The culprits are flyover ramps, the small connectors under interchanges, very short city side-streets, car-park entrances, and stubby grey segments next to mountain switchbacks that blend into the map colour.