Wipeout Pulse
The year is 2207 – ten years since the return of professional Anti-Gravity Racing with the FX300 League, based on the Pacific island of Makana. An unmitigated success, AG Racing quickly regained its position as the most popular spectator sport in the world.
However, by 2200, the influx of traffic to Makana had reached saturation point and the island could no longer sustain its role as the sole venue for the sport.
Thus, the AG Racing Committee, consisting of representatives from The Belmondo Foundation and each of the operating teams, reached unanimous approval for international venues to be added to the schedule.
The Committee understood that it wasn't enough to take FX300 class racing and apply it on a global scale. So the new league would embrace the core values that had made the return of the sport so successful, and take it to the next level.
Implementing magnetic track technology developed at the Mirage Anti-Gravity Racing Institute in Dubai, construction on FX350 class racetracks began in 2205 at a wide range of contrasting locations around the world.
With increased engine performance and an improved weapons arsenal detailed in the rules and regulations, the FX400 will showcase the fastest, most challenging racing in the history of the sport.