Japanese RaceCircuits
The venues where JDM legends were tested, proven, and immortalized. From Tsukuba's time attack temple to Suzuka's F1 heritage to Ebisu's drift paradise. 6 iconic circuits.
Ebisu Circuit: The Drift Paradise
Ebisu Circuit is the world's most famous drift track. Multiple layouts for every skill level, home of Drift Matsuri, and pilgrimage destination for international drifters.
Fuji Speedway: The Long-Straight Classic
Fuji Speedway is Japan's high-speed circuit. 4.563 km with a 1.5 km main straight. Home to WEC, Super GT, and the famous 300R sweeping corner.
Mine Circuit: The Underground Drift Mecca
Mine Circuit is Japan's underground drift and tuning track. 2.2 km of technical corners where grassroots racers and emerging tuners proved themselves.
Sportsland Sugo: The Northeastern Circuit
Sportsland Sugo is northern Japan's premier race circuit. 3.704 km of forested elevation changes, regular Super GT host, and culturally important to Tohoku region motorsport.
Suzuka Circuit: Japan's F1 Heritage Track
Suzuka Circuit is Japan's F1 heritage venue. 5.807 km figure-8 layout with the famous 130R corner. Host of the Japanese Grand Prix and Super GT finale.
Tsukuba Circuit: Japan's Time Attack Temple
Tsukuba Circuit is Japan's time attack temple. 2,045 meters of technical corners where every JDM tuning shop tests their claims. The benchmark that matters.