

Using GameFAQs regularly with these browsers can cause temporary and even permanent IP blocks due to these additional requests. If you are using the Brave browser, or have installed the Ghostery add-on, these programs send extra traffic to our servers for every page on the site that you browse, then send that data back to a third party, essentially spying on your browsing habits.We strongly recommend you stop using this browser until this problem is corrected. The latest version of the Opera browser sends multiple invalid requests to our servers for every page you visit.The most common causes of this issue are: This was a good idea but, unfortunately, very poorly executed.Your IP address has been temporarily blocked due to a large number of HTTP requests. Overall, Team Losi RC Racer is a below-average racing game, regardless of the RC car gimmick and license. The sound effects are believable enough although kind of annoying - which also describes the game as a whole. The music is kind of funky, not bad funky, just kind of generic funky. This problem is compounded by the game's uneven frame rate that drops quite significantly when all the cars appear onscreen.

This is quite annoying since you can't see what's coming up in front of you. As if that's not bad enough, some of the tracks in the game suffer from horrendous pop-up, letting you watch the track fill in right before your eyes. This constant camera motion not only makes it hard to keep track of your car's position in the environment, but also strains your eyes after a while. Unfortunately, the camera view bounces a lot when the car hops over bumps in the course. The camera view is the typical behind-the-car driving-game view. Visually, Team Losi is pretty rough around the edges. You are constantly pressing left and right on the D-pad to try to keep the car moving in a forward direction. Unfortunately, if you only have a regular controller, the control is horrible. The left analog stick lets you steer the car, while the other controls your speed. The control is really good if you're using a Dual Shock pad since it performs just like a real RC car controller. The only time you really fall behind is when you get turned around after rolling and can't tell at first what direction you're facing. The game is fairly easy all you have to do is go for the gates and win. If you hit three gates in the correct sequence, your car gets brief power-ups, like freezing time for a moment, speed bursts, and a little shield thing that makes other cars lose control when they touch you. The racing here is hardly about how tight you take turns but instead is all about making it through the correct order of the colored gates. Eventually you end up with a total of 15 courses and 16 cars. Once you place first in all of the tracks within a section, a new area opens up with more tracks and new cars.

If you end up in any position other than first, you must race the level all over again. Once you start a race, you go up against four other computer-controlled RC cars. After you complete a handful of tracks you drive around trying to find portals that you haven't already entered. While it worked perfectly for Mario, there's really no need for such an intricate and confusing method for a racing game. You drive your car around in a 3D environment and pick a level portal that transports your car to the course you choose. The interface for selecting levels to race is done in a Mario 64-like fashion. You're still better off with your 8-bit copy of RC Pro-Am Instead, RC Racer is plagued with problems in just about every category.

Unfortunately, it's not the 3D RC Pro-Am that many had been hoping for. Team Losi RC Racer is a 3D racing game that puts you in control of RC cars.
