Weekly playlist rewards are one of the easiest ways to grow your garage, but only if you don't treat the whole list like homework. A lot of players open the menu, pick the first event they see, and lose half an hour before they even get close to the car they wanted. If you're chasing FH6 Cars through seasonal rewards, the better move is simple: grab the quick points first, ignore slow matchmaking unless you really need it, and check whether two tasks can be done in the same drive.

Start With The Fast Points

PR Stunts should usually be your first stop. Speed Traps, Danger Signs, Drift Zones, and Speed Zones are quick, especially when you've got a tuned car ready before you start. Most of them take less than a minute once you know the run-up. Two or three stunts can put several points on the board with almost no fuss. After that, look for a Time Attack, Drag Meetup, or similar short event. These tend to pay well for the time spent, and they don't drag you through a full set of races. Monthly Rivals is worth doing early too. It may look tiny on one season, but it adds value across the whole series, which makes it far better than it first appears.

Pick Championships Carefully

Seasonal Championships are useful, but they're not always the fastest path. If you need a chunk of points, run one. If you can play co-op, even better, because the race count is usually lower and the whole thing feels less drawn out. Solo is fine when you've got no choice, but don't jump into three championships just because they're sitting there. Check the Weekly Challenge first. Sometimes it's only a short drive, a few skills, a photo, or one easy win in the right car. When that happens, it's often quicker than another championship. The trick is to pause for thirty seconds and compare the work before committing.

Stack Objectives When You Can

This is where the playlist gets much faster. Say the Weekly Challenge asks you to drive a Japanese car and earn speed skills. At the same time, a Speed Trap might allow an A-Class Japanese build. Use one car and knock out both. It sounds obvious, but people miss it all the time. Daily Challenges can overlap as well, especially with manufacturer, location, or skill requirements. Photo Challenges are another easy add-on if you're already nearby. Before leaving the festival site, scan the full list. You're looking for shared car types, shared roads, shared skills, and anything that can be finished while travelling to the next event.

Avoid The Slow Stuff Unless You Want It

Some playlist activities are fun, but they're poor value if your only goal is the reward car. Horizon Open, Eliminator, Drift Adventure, Hide and Seek, and other lobby-based modes can burn time through loading, waiting, and uneven matchmaking. That's not always bad; sometimes you just want to play online. But if you're doing a quick weekly run, leave those until later. Also, don't underestimate good tunes. A strong setup can make a difficult jump or speed zone feel easy, and community tuners usually have seasonal builds ready within hours of the reset.

Make Each Week Feel Lighter

The best routine is pretty relaxed: complete the PR Stunts, run the short event, clear Monthly Rivals, check for easy overlaps, then fill the gap with one championship or a quick Weekly Challenge. If The Trial is available and you've got a decent team, it can be one of the biggest point boosts on the list. Players who keep collecting FH6 Cars this way spend less time grinding and more time tuning, racing, and actually enjoying the map between each seasonal reset.