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Drift City (also known as Skid Rush (스키드러쉬) in South Korea) is a massively multiplayer online racing video game developed by NPluto and sponsored by several major automotive companies such as Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep, and U1 Technology. The standalone iOS and Android game (Drift City Mobile) was released on August 11, 2015, but has since ...
Around the same time, Genki assisted UTV Ignition Games in the development of their 2011 action game release El Shaddai: Ascension of the Metatron according to the game's director, [3] helping them with the creation of the acclaimed one-off motorcycle action sequence taking place in Chapter 6: Azazel's Zeal, for which they were left uncredited.
Fumiya Takemura is a law major in his eighth year at university. He has over 800,000 yen in debt and no way to pay it back. Aiichiro Fukuhara, a debt collector, offers to write off Takemura’s debt in exchange for accompanying Fukuhara on a walk around Tokyo. Takemura is also told that he will be given 1 million yen in reward.
Tetsuya Hibino (日比野哲也, Hibino Tetsuya) (born 10 April 1974 in Aichi) is a Japanese professional drifting driver, currently competing in the D1 Grand Prix series for Shibata Racing Team. Like many of the drivers in the D1 Grand Prix, he is the owner of his own tuning shop called SunRise, and works on his car himself.
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Drift; Directed by: Futoshi Jinno (1,2,3,4,Special,5) ... A Japanese street racer looks to track down a ...
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.
Kaido: Legend of the Mountain Pass) in Japan and Kaido Racer 2 in PAL territories) is a racing simulator developed by Genki, released in 2005. It is the third installment in the Kaido Battle series, being a sequel to Kaidō Battle 2: Chain Reaction (known as Kaido Racer in Europe and Australia), and borrowing heavily from the influential ...
The following year, Raw Thrills released an updated edition of the original arcade game, The Fast and the Furious: Drift, partly based on the third film, which featured a new car line-up and added seven new tracks set in Japan. [15] In 2011, a second update to the arcade game, Fast & Furious: SuperCars, was released.