Mexico City Arena
Mexico City, Mexico


Most Mexican arenas are nothing more than fortified bullfighting arenas with either a paved or dirt surface. The Mexico City Arena is the exception, having a three-level structure modeled after a Mayan pyramid and professionally-maintained surface. A bright spot south of the border on the Shooting Stars Circuit, the arena runs a regular season from March to November with car, trike, and cycle events.


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Features:
Outer walls are 25 feet high and have 150 DP. Gates are 10 feet high, have 10 DP, and will open when rammed. Defenses consist of eight universally turreted MGs, linked in pairs in each turret. Arena surface is paved. Grandstands hold 40,000.

Ramps and Levels - Paved and indestructible. Ramps are set at a 30 degree angle. Each level is 10 feet high.

AADA Advisory:
Traveling in Mexico is not recommended due to vast areas ruled by cycle gangs and outlaws. The few fortified cities are the only areas with any law enforcement. The Mexican Military is non-existent with most hardware in the hands of warlords. Other than airships the best way to travel in Mexico is with well-armed, large convoys and only then going between the larger fort cities.

Schedule:
Monday - Practice Sessions
Tuesday - Team Night
Wednesday - Amateur Night
Thursday - Challenge Night
Friday - Special Events
Saturday - AADA Divisionals
Sunday - Closed

Special Events:
King of the Pyramid - The duelist that's able to get his vehicle to the top of the pyramid and fend off all challengers win. Double prestige.

Tournaments - local, regional, and national events are held at the Mexico City Arena. Prestige is multiplied by the level of the event, thus local tournaments earn normal prestige while national events earn three times as much prestige.


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