Overview
1997 Nissan Stagea RS Four V appears on the official Forza Horizon 6 car list as a C Class (mid-pack improver) entry in the base roster. This page focuses on what the car actually means for everyday players: how it tends to drive in its class, where it fits inside Forza Horizon 6's Japan setting, how to think about a starting tune, and which other roster entries it naturally compares against.
If you found this page while searching for a single Nissan model in Forza Horizon 6, you are in the right place. Everything below is built around the official list fields (year, class, pack, manufacturer) plus plain-language player notes. We do not invent horsepower numbers, hidden upgrade paths, or unlock guarantees that the official list has not confirmed.
Driving feel in Forza Horizon 6
In Forza Horizon 6, 1997 Nissan Stagea RS Four V sits inside C Class (mid-pack improver). the throttle starts to talk back. The C class window is where you can begin to feel weight transfer through corners without the car punishing every mistake, so it sits naturally for intermediate drivers and casual cruise sessions on Japanese coastal roads.
Where it shines
C class fits most early Festival progression, beginner-friendly online cruises and any event where you want to refine racing line without the speed punishing you.
Tuning starting point
Aim for a tune that prioritises mid-corner grip first, then a moderate gear-ratio change for the typical road event speed. A community tune is usually enough.
These are general starting points only, not a guaranteed competitive setup. Forza Horizon 6 community tunes that already have hundreds of downloads are usually a faster route than building from scratch, especially if you are not sure of the car's drivetrain or aero behaviour yet.
How to get 1997 Nissan Stagea RS Four V
This car is listed without an add-on label on the official Forza Horizon 6 source, so we treat it as part of the base roster. Most players should be able to access it in-game through normal progression and Autoshow purchases unless Forza later moves the listing.
Real-world background
1990s cars are the heart of JDM heritage and European supercar nostalgia. Players who grew up on tuner films, Japanese arcade racers and early Le Mans homologation cars usually start their Forza garage in this era. Nissan sits inside the wider Japanese performance tradition, which is one of the strongest brand pulls for Forza Horizon 6 thanks to the Japan setting. Players come into Nissan pages looking for tuner heritage, JDM cultural context and how the model lines map onto the Forza class system. For 1997 Nissan Stagea RS Four V specifically, the entry combines a 1997 model year with a C Class (mid-pack improver) placement on the Forza Horizon 6 list, which gives it a particular niche players can plan around.



