Planning
Plot Options
I have considered several plots based off of the research I conducted, and have currently narrowed it down to three different ones.
Plot Number One
An automotive engineering student who has dropped out of college is struggling to pay his bills and get a grip on his life, but still maintains his love for cars and racing. One night while drinking at a lonesome bar on a highway stop in the midwest, he notices a group of tuned-up cars leaving together. With his interest growing, he follows them, to find that they've closed off a portion of the street for racing. Watching some amazing cars battle each other on the asphalt fuels his desperation. Rushing a driver on the side of the road, he steals a prized antique Corolla, with a deadly powerful engine, and makes his way off into the night.
Plot Number Two
A mechanic (for now mechanic A), working at a successful garage spends most of his days tuning up the garage's clients' cars for track days and street racing. He himself wishes to get into the scene on the street but because of old debts, he cannot finance his wish. This changes when a new crafty mechanic (for now mechanic B), suggests they copy keys and install back doors to allow them to steal the cars of clients once the shop is done working on them and sell them. The golden rule: never keep one of the cars. Everything goes according to plan until a customer brings in an extremely rare JDM car. mechanic A, seeing his childhood dream cannot resist and runs away with the car, cops and mechanic B in pursuit.
Plot Number Three
The son of a former f1 driver who has passed away has grown up with his aunt and uncle in the rural Gunma prefecture of Japan, where he has lived for the most part a quiet life until he gets his license and discovers his fathers old racing gear and car. Determined to follow this new walk of life, he discovers that he is too old for karting, and cannot finance racing training for himself, so he decides to turn to the streets for skill-building. Wearing a ski mask and racing anonymously, he earns a reputation in the racing community and law enforcement.
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