Drifting began as a driving technique shaped by Japanese mountain roads, racing skill, tuning culture and the search for control beyond ordinary grip. Over time, the sideways car moved from informal road scenes and specialist media into organised competition, professional judging systems, international championships and a global audience.
The Drift Revolution: From Mountain Roads to Global Motorsport Culture tells the fact-based story of how controlled oversteer became one of modern motorsport's most recognisable disciplines. From Japanese pioneers and grassroots events to professional series, tyre technology, tuning workshops, global car platforms, media culture, gaming, cinema, sponsorship and international recognition, this book follows the development of drifting as both a motorsport and a cultural movement.
It explores the cars, drivers, venues, technologies and communities that carried drifting from local roads and circuits to the world stage, showing how a discipline built on angle, speed, smoke, style and proximity became a lasting part of global automotive culture.