Rescue personnel in Japan have issued warnings of mudslides and flooding following one of the strongest storms to hit the country in decades.
After making landfall on the southern island of Kyushu on Sunday morning, Typhoon Nanmadol killed at least four people and injured more than 100 others.
By Tuesday, 140,000 homes remained without power.
After passing across much of the country and out to sea, the storm has been downgraded to a cyclone.
State broadcaster NHK said one man was killed when his car was submerged in flooding, and another died after being buried in a landslide.
Two more people were found “without vital signs”, a term often used to refer to a death before it is certified by a coroner.
At least 114 people have been injured, 14 of them seriously.
The super typhoon brought gusts of up to 234km/h (145mph), destroying homes, and disrupting transport and businesses. It is equivalent to a category four or five hurricane.
The capital, Tokyo, experienced heavy rain, with the Tozai underground line suspended because of flooding. Bullet train services, ferries and hundreds of flights have been cancelled; shops and businesses have shut. Local video footage showed roofs ripped off buildings and billboards toppled over.
Prime Minister Fumio Kishida delayed a visit to New York, where he was due to give speech at the UN General Assembly, until Tuesday, to monitor the storm’s impact.