Results for “RACK (successor)”
A grand — £1,000, or a fat stack of cash.
Consent framework that's honest about risk: nothing is 100% safe, so know the danger and choose it anyway.
Thousands of dollars in cash — one rack is $1,000.
An enemy whose shield has just been broken off.
A tracksuit.
Boiling hot weather — sun so fierce the pavement's splitting.
Get stuck in. Stop faffing and start.
Birmingham's old red-light district — behind the famous department store.
Absolutely knackered. Done in.
Excellent or first-rate — and as 'get crackin'', to get started.
Insanely good at a game — playing at a level that seems almost unfair.
Pirated, cracked software distributed illegally, a cornerstone term of old BBS and scene culture.
A DJ or artist's full performance — the run of tracks they play in their slot.
The player whose whole job is racking up kills and clearing bodies for the team.
Barracks — the lane buildings that upgrade your creeps when you smash the enemy's.
Super-charged lane creeps you earn for wiping all of the enemy's barracks.
SM64 trick chaining backward long jumps to rack up insane speed.
Cracking open a game's ROM to rewrite how it plays or looks.
The rank bracket where you feel permanently stuck no matter how well you play.
Meaningless TikTok hashtag people slap on videos hoping to crack the For You page.
Reddit's point score racked up from upvotes on your posts and comments.
A Redditor who posts mainly to rack up karma, with no real interest in the conversation.
A Liverpool street kid with attitude — tracksuit, swagger, mischief.
Brummie for mad, daft, a bit cracked.
Standing about gassing won't pay the bills — let's crack on.
A causeway or paved track — Welsh for the kind of road Romans built.
Dublin's word for a chav — tracksuited, gobby, working-class stereotype.
It's so hot the rocks are cracking — Irish for a proper scorcher.
Roasting, cracking jokes on somebody.
Houston DJ technique — slow the track, chop it up.
The one-bar Showboys loop that powers nearly every New Orleans bounce track.
NOLA's signature sandwich on crackly Leidenheimer French bread.
A drug user — usually a crackhead — calling the line for a fix.
Pellets — small wraps of crack, heroin or gear ready to sell.
Crack cocaine — the white side.
Out of jail but on parole or probation — every move tracked.
A wheeled excavator, as opposed to a tracked one.
Patois pronunciation of 'tune' — a track, especially a banger.
A kill in a shooter — and, as a verb, to rack them up.
An absolutely fire track — a tune so good it sets the crowd off.
A compliment for someone strikingly beautiful, so good-looking they stop you in your tracks.
A sweating, anxious Pepe emote for tense, nerve-wracking, or scary moments.
Doing something deliberately cool to rack up "aura" (coolness points) — often posing or performing for the effect.
Late-night reckless energy — going hard, on a track or in the streets.
A genuinely great, catchy song — if a track is a bop, it goes hard and you can't stop playing it.
An unreleased or unidentified track in a DJ set that fans scramble to name.
The moment a track's tension breaks and the bass and beat slam back in.
Back-to-back — two DJs sharing one set, trading tracks turn by turn.