Tsuchiya Before D1: The Pluspy Era
Before D1 Grand Prix, Tsuchiya was filmed by Pluspy magazine on Japanese mountain passes. The grainy AE86 footage from 1985-1995 founded modern drift culture.
Affiliate Disclosure: This page contains affiliate links. We may earn a commission when you purchase through these links, at no extra cost to you.
Before Keiichi Tsuchiya was the Drift King and before D1 Grand Prix existed, he was a relatively unknown Japanese touring car driver who happened to drive his AE86 Trueno aggressively on Japanese mountain passes. The "Pluspy era" — roughly 1985 to 1995 — was when Tsuchiya's casual mountain pass driving became culturally significant through grainy magazine and video footage. This decade established the foundation for everything that came later.
The Casual Driver
In the mid-1980s, Tsuchiya was a touring car driver competing in the Japanese Touring Car Championship and various regional races. His professional career was respectable but unremarkable — multiple race entries, occasional podium finishes, but no championships or famous wins.
What made Tsuchiya different was his approach to street driving. After race weekends and during weekday evenings, he would drive his personal Toyota AE86 Trueno on Japanese mountain passes. His driving style was intentionally aggressive — sustained four-wheel drifts through corners, late braking, opposite-lock recovery from out-of-shape situations.
This wasn't unusual for Japanese street drivers of the era. What was unusual was the documentation.
The Pluspy Connection
Pluspy was a Japanese magazine that specialized in performance car culture. In the mid-1980s, Pluspy started filming and publishing Tsuchiya's mountain pass driving. The footage was uncomplicated — basic camera setups, no commentary, just Tsuchiya driving his AE86 hard for several minutes at a time.
The magazine compiled this footage into VHS tapes that were distributed alongside the print magazine. The "Pluspy" video series became Tsuchiya's first widely-distributed footage and made him a minor celebrity in Japanese performance car circles.
What Pluspy Tapes Looked Like
The footage was raw:
- Single camera, often handheld
- No commentary or music initially
- Multiple corner entries from various angles
- Tsuchiya driving the same mountain road for 5-10 minutes
- Visible drift angles, controlled slides, full commitment
This raw quality is what made the footage influential. Viewers could see exactly what Tsuchiya was doing without editing or production tricks.
The Initial D Inspiration
When Shuichi Shigeno began publishing Initial D in 1995, the manga was directly inspired by Pluspy footage and Tsuchiya's driving. Shigeno has explicitly stated this in interviews. The Takumi Fujiwara character — a teenage tofu delivery driver with extraordinary touge skills — was modeled on the documented reality of drivers like Tsuchiya practicing on mountain passes.
When Initial D became globally popular, it indirectly amplified Tsuchiya's reputation. Anyone curious about "the real Initial D" would discover Tsuchiya through the Pluspy footage that had been filmed a decade earlier.
The Cultural Bridge
The Pluspy era serves as a cultural bridge between:
- Underground street racing of the 1980s (informal, undocumented)
- Professional drift competition of the 2000s (D1 Grand Prix)
- Initial D mainstream cultural phenomenon (1995 onward)
Without the Pluspy documentation, Tsuchiya might have been just another anonymous Japanese touring car driver. The footage made him into a cultural figure worthy of mainstream attention.
Legacy
The Pluspy era is foundational to drift culture but rarely discussed compared to D1 Grand Prix or Initial D. Without it, those later cultural moments wouldn't have happened or would have been significantly different. The grainy footage of Tsuchiya in his AE86 — driving alone on mountain passes for the camera — is the original documentation of what would become a global motorsport.
For drift culture historians, the Pluspy era is essential primary source material.
Featured Products

Diecast Model Car Compatible with Tarmac Works x Prix 1:64 Mazda RX-7 (FD3S) Mazdaspeed A Spec
View Deal


Jada Fast & Furious 1:32 1995 Toyota Supra Die-Cast Car, Toys for Kids and Adults(Black)


NRG Innovations NRG-FRP-301 Fiber Glass Fixed Back Bucket Racing Seat (Large), 4pt Harness
Related Articles
The 10 Best JDM Drift Cars of All Time (And Why They're Impossible to Replace)
These ten Japanese machines didn't just define drifting — they invented the culture, the techniques, and the community that keeps the sport alive today.
Top Fuel S2000: Tsukuba Time Attack Legend
Top Fuel Racing's naturally aspirated Honda S2000 was the fastest NA time attack car in Japan for years. The F20C engineering and aero story behind the Tsukuba laps.
Cyber Evo: Tarzan Yamada's Time Attack Benchmark
Tarzan Yamada's Cyber Evo Lancer Evolution IX was the benchmark for Japanese time attack in the late 2000s. Multiple Tsukuba records, radical aero, and sub-54-second laps.