Ice road truckers meet parkour couriers. A disgraced ex-olympic skater must deliver a hard drive across a frozen river while rival crews on modified snowmobiles hunt her for the data inside her helmet cam.

Classic cars retrofitted with jet engines. A 70‑year‑old former revolutionary mechanic leads a crew of elders against a Miami cartel that wants to turn the Malecon into a private drag strip. Final race at sunset. One car left standing.

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.

Luchador mechanics by day, vigilante street cleaners by night. They wield hydraulic jacks and rebar against a cartel that’s poisoning the underground racing scene with synthetic fuel that turns drivers into addicts.

Here’s a draft story concept for ExtremeStreets 10 Movies — a high-octane, gritty anthology series where each film explores a different extreme subculture, underground world, or lawless corner of a hyper-urban future. ExtremeStreets: Decade of Asphalt Kings

Scrap‑bike jousting in the City of the Dead. A young woman builds a war‑bike from tomb relics to challenge the undefeated champion who murdered her brother — but the champion rides a salvaged tank.