Drag Race Superstar Hack

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Flaviano Bada

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Aug 4, 2024, 8:41:43 PM8/4/24
to ycchoremu
RuPauls Drag Race Superstar is a mobile app by World of Wonder, Eastside Games Group and Night Garden, inspired by the Drag Race franchise. The game stars the player as a rising superstar stylist, working to slay the competition with the fiercest fashion.

Every month, the game is updated for the next "Season" or "Season Pass". In every season pass, a drag race alumni is added to the game, which can be unlocked with a different power up to advantage to them for the Werkroom.


Choose from hundreds of fabulous fierce fashion pieces across a multitude of different drag genres to combine and create your own unique style. Upgrade your pieces to create stunning looks, hunty, that will make everyone gag.


Werk the runway! Take your looks into nail biting competitions with other Queens around the world, and fight to be the next drag superstar. Win more incredible looks that will help you serve your eleganza extravaganza.


Yes, this does include all 13 seasons of the regular Drag Race (whilst currently watching the newest 14th season), the six All-Stars seasons, the three UK seasons, two Canadian seasons, two Holland seasons, three Thai seasons, the Down Under season, the Italian season, the Spanish season, and the newest UK vs The World series.


This is a handy feature because it gives you the motivation to keep playing the game. I would try to power up my werkstations as quickly as possible so that I could get to the runway challenges faster and show off my beautiful wardrobe.


It gives me very strong Cookie Clicker vibes because I find myself just staring into the abyss, clicking on the werkstations trying to level them up. At one stage, it became a regular part of my day where I would just have it open and endlessly click on things. Very empty brain energy. My drag closet was growing and thriving. I was on my way to becoming the next drag superstar.


Everything was pretty standard in terms of waiting for the game to download the update and re-accepting the updated terms of service. But then my colourful drag world quickly turned grey. It took me back to the start of the game.


RuPaul was asking me about my name and my avatar but it was hard to see through the tears I started to shed at the thought of losing my drag closet. I quickly went onto the App Store to see if anyone else was having the same problem as me and it looked like this update had wiped everything for a lot of people too.


My wardrobe was still there and so were the characters I unlocked. My werkstation levels also stayed the same. It seemed like the only thing that changed was I had to start back at episode one but that was a small price to pay for being allowed to keep everything.


Eastside Games did respond to the onslaught of reviews from those who were in the same boat as me and updated the game to allow for progress to be saved through your Facebook account but for me, the damage was already done.


To my knowledge, this game is the first of its kind in that it centres solely around drag queens and drag culture as a whole. For this to exist, it means that not only can young queer kids see themselves represented in gaming but also signals a positive sign of tides changing.


Going deeper than that, the discreetness of a mobile game allows those who may be fearful of their identity or find themselves in an unsafe environment where they cannot openly explore their identity.


A new and unique drag racing event is coming to Bradenton Motorsports Park in 2024. The Professional Racers Owners Organization (PRO) and Drag Illustrated announced that the inaugural PRO Superstar Shootout will be held February 8-10, 2024 and streamed live on FloRacing.


The PRO Superstar Shootout is a one-of-a-kind drag racing event promoted by Drag Illustrated and the Professional Racers Owners Organization. Alan Johnson, President of PRO, called the event "a dramatic new leap for professional drag racing."


The PRO Superstar Shootout will be an invitation-only race, with invitees to be announced very soon. Drivers will run four qualifying sessions to determine the eight-car fields in Top Fuel and Funny Car and the 16-car field in Pro Stock. Random chip draws will determine the pairings for all rounds of eliminations up to the final rounds.


Drag racing fans will be able to watch the PRO Superstar Shootout live on FloRacing. Sign up today to watch the PRO Superstar Shootout and other major drag racing events throughout the year on FloRacing.


Should the Todrick Hall article be part of this project? I was surprised to see our project banner on his talk page. I know he's appeared on the series multiple times, but I'd say his connection to RPDR is tangential. Thoughts? ---Another Believer (Talk) 14:29, 4 July 2020 (UTC)


I don't remember where we left off re: whether or not projects of contestants were part of this project or not. I've nominated Poundcake (album) for Good article status. The album features several RPDR queens. Should this article be under the umbrella of this project? ---Another Believer (Talk) 01:20, 27 May 2020 (UTC)


Someone created an unsourced stub for Kiara (drag queen), which I've reverted twice. I don't want to be accused of edit warring, so someone else may need to step in here. FWIW, I'd love to see an entry if possible, but this unsourced one does not make the cut. ---Another Believer (Talk) 15:08, 20 August 2020 (UTC)


@Nikki311: Thanks again for all your assessment work on behalf of this project. I am curious, are you assessing season articles as high- or mid-class, and are all contestant articles low-importance? Any insight here would be helpful, and also give project members a chance to discuss the importance scale. ---Another Believer (Talk) 21:29, 22 March 2019 (UTC)


Just to let everybody know that even though the premiere of Canada's Drag Race is still four days away, there has already been a (newly registered) editor named "Adm-500 Drag race" who's already gone in and tried to pre-spoil the first four weeks of the competition by updating the progress table with unsourced placement claims. (Some of their claims match rumours I've heard on the Toronto tell-a-queen circuit, so I'm not accusing them of being a liar, but that's not the point: the point is that even if their information is completely correct, we still don't publish the claims on here at all until they're independently verifiable in published sources.) I've reverted and revision-deleted their edits and placed the page under semi-protection, but just wanted to give you hennies a heads up what's happening just in case this snowballs. Bearcat (talk) 14:12, 29 June 2020 (UTC)


I've not read this entire discussion, but I'm not sure why this is so controversial. We should present this as a list inclusion, not an award. Can't we just write something completely neutral like, "In 2019, Vulture.com ranked "America's top-100 Drag Race superstars" in their list of the "the most powerful drag queens" in the United States; Xperson ranked number YYY". Or, if they were not in the top 20, "Xperson was included in Vulture.com's 2019 list, "The Most Powerful Drag Queens in America", a ranking of America's top-100 Drag Race superstars". I'm fine with this wording being used for any of the queens in the list. @Gleeanon409: Please be sure to let others weigh in so a consensus can be formed, before taking immediate action. Thanks! ---Another Believer (Talk) 01:09, 20 May 2020 (UTC)


Since this discussion sort of went stagnant before consensus was reached, I think it could help to take a quick poll on everyone's preferences. Below I will list all of the sentences that have been proposed so far, including the one that Gleeanon has just added to some articles. Which of the following does everyone prefer? If none of the following, would you like to propose a new sentence of your own?


I just saw this at the Sasha Velour article. We should be following the sources with WP:Due weight. Drag queens obviously are not simply their personas. When someone states that they only identify as a female/a woman when in drag, then it can be WP:Undue and confusing to refer to them with feminine pronouns throughout their Wikipedia article, especially when it comes to their early life as separate from their career. It can leave readers thinking that the person identifies as transgender when they don't. And I state that regardless of the fact that transgender is an umbrella term. RuPaul says that people can refer to him by masculine or feminine pronouns. But sources generally refer to RuPaul as male/by masculine pronouns. So that is why Wikipedia should as well. And it currently does. Not to mention his tempestuous relationship with the LGBT community and people stating that he's not trans. In Sasha Velour's case, it's stated that "Steinberg is genderqueer and does not have any preferred pronouns when not in drag. Her drag persona, Sasha Velour, is referred to as 'she'." So using feminine pronouns throughout that article isn't too big a deal.


Since it appears that only one editor (Gleeanon409, since indeffed as a sock) opposed including the quoted title in the sentence, I've boldly restored it for now. The current version also specifies that the list contains only performers from Drag Race, reading: "In June 2019, a panel of judges from New York magazine placed [name @ place] on their list of 'the most powerful drag queens in America', a ranking of 100 former Drag Race contestants." I believe this is consistent with the input of the few others who commented on the wording. Courtesy pings to Another Believer and Kbabej. Armadillopteryx 03:41, 24 November 2020 (UTC)


The season 12 page is currently protected because of edit warring, in which people insist on changing safe placements to high or low. And yes, it got so bad that a request for protection was granted. I'd say we ought to take this as a chance to find a solution for the ongoing issue on how we determine placements. Currently we have these three sentences to define the placing:

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