Far Cry 6 has 212 Collectibles (30 Criptograma Charts, 19 Roosters, 15 USB Songs, 143 Hidden Histories) & 103 Military Targets (21 FND Bases, 26 Anti-Aircraft Cannons, 26 Military Checkpoints, 20 Supply Drops, 10 Ambushes), and 5 Unique Animals.
None of them are missable. You can still do everything after the story in free-roam. You can keep track of Collectible Progress under Pause Menu > Collection. Of Military Targets youc an keep track under Pause Menu > Journal > Military Targets / All Completed (except Anti-Air, Supply Drops, Ambushes which aren’t tracked).
You can already collect them during the story if you like. After finishing the Prologue on the starting island (Isla Santuario), the entire map will open up and you can play the regions in any order you want and fully explore the open world right from the start. The Collectibles are traditional collectable items. However, unlike most other Ubisoft games, you cannot buy an in-game map for them. Only for USB Sticks and Roosters you can buy a map from Ubisoft Connect with Far Cry Credits (microtransactions). The Military Targets are enemy installations of different types that you can conquer by killing the enemies around them.
Below are links to all individual types:
Collectibles
- Criptograma Chests & Criptograma Charts
- Roosters
- USB Sticks (USB Songs)
- Treasures
- All Mythical Animals
- All Animal Hunting Spots
Military Targets
- FND Bases (Outposts)
- Anti-Aircraft Cannons & Depleted Uranium
- Checkpoints
- Supply Drops (Recon Points)
- Ambushes
Miscellaneous Quest-Related Collectable Items
- McKay Wave Jammers
- Admiral Benitez Billboards
- Baseball Memorabilia
- Lorenzo’s Children
- Gabriel Statues
Weapons, Armor, Cars, Leaders, Amigos
Vaas DLC Expansion
Pagan DLC Expansion
For anything else, check out the complete Far Cry 6 Wiki & Strategy Guide and All Quest Walkthroughs.
Mariah Theriault says
As a completionist its gonna bug me trying to find all the hidden histories. There should be some sort of community project to discover and Mark the locations of them like a public interactive map or something.
Colin Hartley says
I agree! Hopefully there will be a guide on it soon.