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  2. Keiichi Tsuchiya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keiichi_Tsuchiya

    Keiichi Tsuchiya (土屋圭市, Tsuchiya Keiichi, born January 30, 1956) is a Japanese professional race car driver. He is known as the Drift King (ドリキン, Dorikin) for his nontraditional use of drifting in non-drifting racing events and his role in popularizing drifting as a motorsport.

  3. Best Motoring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Best_Motoring

    Best Motoring, and Hot Version were all produced by Kodansha/2&4 Motoring. The Japanese version of Best Motoring was a monthly video series covering mainly non-tuned factory cars, whereas Hot Version (ホットバージョン) was the bi-monthly video series testing mainly tuned cars.

  4. Tokyo Xtreme Racer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tokyo_Xtreme_Racer

    Its first installment, Shutokō Battle '94: Drift King, was released in 1994 for the Super Famicom, while the latest installment is Tokyo Xtreme Racer, that released in early access on PC on 23rd January 2025 which is Genki's first major platform racing game release in 18 years as the last major release was back in September 2007.

  5. 2024 Drift Masters season - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024_Drift_Masters_season

    2 3 3: 10 3 3: 1 3 1: 10 2 4: 1 8: 5 7: 437 2 Duane McKeever 12 2 6: 2 8: 4 4 2: 22 1 1 1: 412 3 James Deane: 1 1 1: 3 7: 2 3 1: 17 3 3: 2 3 2: 409 4 Conor Shanahan 34 11 4 4: 5 1 3: 1 8: 6 7 293 5 Paweł Korpuliński 18 8: 8 21 3 3 13 265 6 Kevin Pesur 1 19 6 15 16 17 4 4: 250 7 Kevin Piskolty 5 6: 15 18 6: 14 4 6 246 8 Jack Shanahan: 25 5 4 5 ...

  6. Project Torque - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Torque

    Drifting is a 2–8 player mode that uses the same tracks as simulation and arcade modes and also comes in addition with an currently for this mode exclusive track. Lap times and position do not matter, rather the winner of a drift round is determined by how many drift points the players can score.

  7. Tokyo Xtreme Racer: Drift - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tokyo_Xtreme_Racer:_Drift

    Tokyo Xtreme Racer: Drift (known as Kaidō Battle: Nikko, Haruna, Rokko, Hakone in Japan) is the third racing game published by Crave Entertainment for the PlayStation 2. It is the fourth main installment in Shutokō Battle series. The game allows racing at both day and night.

  8. Neo Drift Out: New Technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neo_Drift_Out:_New_Technology

    Neo Drift Out: New Technology [a] is a 1996 rallying video game developed by Visco Corporation for the Neo Geo and Neo Geo CD. [1] It is the fourth title in the Drift Out series. . Though it follows Super Drift Out: World Rally Championships, it is closer to the earlier Drift Out '94: The Hard Ord

  9. Tokyo Xtreme Racer: Drift 2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tokyo_Xtreme_Racer:_Drift_2

    Gameplay is divided into daytime and nighttime. During the day, the player participates in legally sanctioned races and time trials to earn money. At night however, the player instead can challenge and be challenged to various types of duel matches, such as a one-on-one battles, drift events and time attacks, to increase their reputation.