Rachel Entwistle

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Rachel Elizabeth Entwistle (December 14, 1978) - (January 20, 2006) was the wife of Neil Entwistle, an unemployed British computer programmer. Rachel, along with her infant daughter, Lillian, were found in bed, shot to death in the master bedroom of their rented home in Hopkinton, Massachusetts. Rachel had been shot twice; once in her torso and once in the head and Lillian had been killed by a single gunshot to her torso. Around the time of the murders, Neil had vanished off to England, where he is originally from.

On February 9, 2005, Neil Entwistle was arrested at a London Tube Station at the request of the U.S. Authorities who wish to extradite him to the U.S to face murder charges in respect of his wife and daughter.


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Authorities who wish to extradite him to the U.S to face murder charges in respect of his wife and daughter. Two conditions will result to players being forfeited during a drag race—head-on collisions with a vehicle (traffic or opponent), barrier or divider, or blown engines as a result from prolonged redlining and the subsequent overheating of the engine. On February 9, 2005, Neil Entwistle was arrested at a London Tube Station at the request of the U.S. Steering in this mode is simplified to simply allow for lane changes, while the computer handles the steering along the lanes, and the player focuses more on maintaining an optimum speed for the car. Around the time of the murders, Neil had vanished off to England, where he is originally from. In order to master Drag mode, players must employ good timing and reflexes for gear shifting, redlining, overtaking, and the use of nitrous oxide boosts; the mode places particular emphasis in monitoring the tachometer during races, which is enlarged and situated on the leftmost portion of the screen. Rachel had been shot twice; once in her torso and once in the head and Lillian had been killed by a single gunshot to her torso. It involves racing against three cars on typically straight tracks, and attempting to obtain top positions to win.

Rachel, along with her infant daughter, Lillian, were found in bed, shot to death in the master bedroom of their rented home in Hopkinton, Massachusetts. Drag racing is the second most technical form of race in the game. Rachel Elizabeth Entwistle (December 14, 1978) - (January 20, 2006) was the wife of Neil Entwistle, an unemployed British computer programmer. This may explain the absence of nitrous oxide in this mode, since it serves no suitable purpose in this situation. To list an article for deletion after adding {{subst:afd}} at the top, you have to do the following:. Drift mode is the only type of racing where speed does not matter, since players are given the freedom to complete the allocated number laps at their own pace. For more information, particularly on merging or moving the article during the discussion, read the Guide to deletion.
. Bonuses are awarded for players who drift in the other borders of the track, drift vertically, or perform chained-drifting (continuous drifting by constantly steering the vehicle during drifts to maintain speed); if the player succeeds in ending a drift without collisions onto the sides of the track, the collected points are added into the score, otherwise, the collected points are cancelled.

This article is being considered for deletion in accordance with Wikipedia's deletion policy.
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You are welcome to edit this article, but please do not blank this article or remove this notice while the discussion is in progress. The player would be required to beat these scores in order to obtain top positions. The player competes with three other contestants, who appear to accumulate scores along with the player during the drift session. Drift mode consists of one player in a short loop track, where the objective is to collect as much points as possible by drifting along the track. Drifting is one of the most challenging and technical aspects of the game.

These races are typically shorter than "circuits" (with a maximum of 8 km in length), so players are required to be more cautious of any mistakes during racing. Sprint mode is a variation on the Circuit mode, where the contestants race in a point-to-point track instead of loop tracks. In the case of Underground, Knockout sessions have a maximum of three laps for four racers. A variant of Circuit is Knockout, which, similar to previous Need for Speed titles, involves "knocking out" the last racer who passes the starting line in each lap until the final leader of the race remains, and wins the race.

Circuit is a standard race that involves racing with up to four opponents cars around a loop track for two laps or more, and is the main mode of the game. . In addition, vehicles do not have damage models. EA took some effort in making the races appear as sanctioned racing events, and included a public service announcement in the game's introduction.

It is rumoured that the car manufacturers were very strict in how their vehicles were to be portrayed in this game, especially considering the "illegal street racing" reputation of the tuner culture. Despite this, Underground was commercially very successful, and inspired a sequel. This, plus the increasingly arcade-like controls, became points of controversy for Need for Speed fans. Instead of hundred-thousand dollar exotics, Underground featured vehicles associated with the Import Scene.

All races take place in a city at night. A complete reimagining of the series' formula, NFSU offered a career mode featuring a storyline, and a garage mode that allowed players to fully customize their cars with a large variety of brand-name performance and visual upgrades. Its premise (highly tuned, customised cars participating in illegal street races) was likely inspired by the Import Scene and the movies The Fast and the Furious and 2 Fast 2 Furious. It is part of the Need for Speed series of games.

Need for Speed: Underground (NFSU) is a racing video game, developed and published by Electronic Arts in 2003.