Where to find the Tokyo Tower in Forza Horizon 6
Take a snapshot of Tokyo's iconic tower.
Each week in Forza Horizon 6's Series 1 update, you need to take a photo of a different location. The first week, Summer, started pretty simply in the Horizon Festival grounds, but now you've got to take a photo of the Tokyo Tower. It turns out that finding a massive red tower is actually quite hard when your view is limited to a car's cockpit.
Below, I'll show you where you need to go to complete the Tokyo Tower photo challenge so you can quit being a tourist and get back to racing—there are limited-time cars on the line, here, driver.
Forza Horizon 6 Tokyo Tower location


You can find the Tokyo Tower in the west of Tokyo near the main highway, just south of the seasonal Tokyo City Food Delivery job and northeast of the Tokyo House location. Once you're in the area, it's pretty easy to spot the bright red base and the Horizon Festival boards around it.
For the seasonal challenge that requires you to take a photo of the Tokyo Tower, all you actually need to do is photograph the base. In fact, taking a full-length shot of the tower itself weirdly doesn't count. Drive up to the base of the tower, enter photo mode (up on the d-pad), and take a snapshot of the base. It's that easy.
In return for your troubles, you'll earn three Festival Playlist points and the 'Oooh…Shiny!' quick chat line. The latter is largely meaningless to most of us, but the Festival Playlist progress is all-but required if you want to get the exclusively weekly cars—1997 Nissan Skyline GT-R V-Spec and 1991 Honda CR-X SiR—or the Series 1 reward cars—2008 Mazda Furai and 2010 Nissan 370Z.
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Rory has made the fatal error of playing way too many live service games at once, and somehow still finding time for everything in between. Sure, he’s an expert at Destiny 2, Call of Duty, and more, but at what cost? He’s even sunk 1,000 hours into The Elder Scrolls Online over the years. At least he put all those hours spent grinding challenges to good use over the years as a freelancer and guides editor. In his spare time, he’s also an avid video creator, often breaking down the environmental design of his favourite games. If you can’t track him down, he’s probably lost in a cave with a bunch of dwarves shouting “rock and stone” to no end.
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