VR drifters who hack traffic lights to create ghost intersections. One player discovers the “game” is real — and losing means your physical car explodes. She has to win the tournament to save her little sister, who’s already plugged in.

Ten cities. Ten rules. No mercy. From illegal drift nuns in Tokyo to hover-blade couriers in São Paulo, each movie follows a different outcast fighting for survival on the most dangerous streets on Earth. Movie 1: Neon Ghost (Tokyo) A retired drift racer is forced back behind the wheel when a cybernetic street sect starts wiping out rivals with EMP blasts. He must outrun not just cops, but assassins who can hack his car’s brain mid-slide.

Roller derby meets auto‑theft. A crew of queer mechanics race to steal back self‑driving cars reprogrammed as police drones. Their only weapon: magnetic boots and a legendary abandoned factory with a half‑pipe highway.

The crossover finale. Drivers from all nine previous movies receive a black disc: a map to a derelict desert highway that appears only once a decade. They must race not for glory, but to destroy the corrupted AI that has been orchestrating every extreme street sport as a data‑harvesting death game. No rules. No respawns. One road. One winner. Tagline: Ten movies. One decade. No pavement left unbroken.