Post by Dewey on Oct 12, 2007 11:37:28 GMT -5
Dylan Dycota
Birthdate: May 11, 1980
Height: 5'11"
Weight: 178 lbs
Eye color: brown
Hair color: Black
Race: German
Occupation:
Friends: Miles, Araxie, Lennox, Jarred
Enemies: Many
Dylan Dycota (a.k.a "Dog") has lived life to the extreme on the streets of Salisbury, England since the age of sixteen--the same age his name was first put on record at the local Juvenile Detention Center. A young man who literally pursued the fast lane, he was a major proponent of underground criminal activity by day, and high performance street racing by night. He was defiant and rebellious throughout his adolescence, constantly clashing with the authorities, spending more nights locked up in prison than he can count on his fingers, and nightly raising hell in the midst of fights at any club or bar. Despite his bravado (or perhaps because of it), Dylan has become something of a demigod to the ruffians of Salisbury. His forte with vehicles crafted especially for speed has made his name a legend, and though he's wanted by more than one district in England for any number of crimes, it's doubtable he'll ever be caught and incarcerated.
At the age of twenty-three, Dylan took a break from major felonies to establish Dead End Racing, but declined partnerships from professional racecar drivers as well as big time sponsorships. Instead, he sought out talent among the underpriviledged ("kids who've reached the dead end in their lives"), took them under his wing, and transformed them from nobodies to celebrities virtually overnight. Four years later, though the kids are his only softspot (aside from his five-member entourage of dogs), he conducts business with a no-nonsense air, and expects more than the best from each of his racers. He'll push them to their limits until they feel they're living with a drill sergeant, and he can often be more a parent than an older brother. Nonetheless, his mentorship pays off by leaps and bounds. To those on the outside, Dylan Dycota is considered a dangerous convict and fugitive, but Salisbury's underdogs romanticize his life story and call him an audacious desperado instead.