Busting out the Hellcats and the Lancer Evolution IX from http://www.TurboRacing.net to see what these 1:76 scale racing cars are all about. In the previous video, we looked at the semi-trucks ( • Loser Does the Dishes! Turbo Racing 1:76 C... ) and WOW, if these tiny cars are anything like the haulers, then we are in for a treat! First, lets get in a quick race with the semi-trucks.. and then unbox this tiny Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution IX and the TWO Dodge Challenger SRT Hellcats. We are racing literal pocket-sized monsters today — Turbo Racing’s micro RC cars in 1:76 scale — and these things are way beyond “toy.” They’ve got full proportional steering and throttle, built-in LiPo batteries, LED lights, and you can drive them on a kitchen table like it’s Le Mans. We put them head-to-head to decide who’s doing dishes after dinner. Loser washes. Winner talks trash forever. First up: the red widebody muscle car. This one is basically a mini Dodge Challenger SRT Hellcat / Demon. You can see it right away: the twin hood scoops, the angry quad headlights in that deep blacked-out grille, the big chin splitter, and those cartoonishly wide fenders. It even has the black racing stripes down the hood. It looks like somebody shrunk a 700+ hp Hellcat down to Hot Wheels size and said, “Here, try not to crash this on your cutting board.” Second: the red four-door rally beast. This one is straight-up modeled after a Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution VIII / IX style sedan. You’ve got the vented hood, the aggressive front bumper, the high-rise rear wing, and that squat AWD rally stance. It’s got the ‘we just left a WRC stage’ energy. It LOOKS like it wants to spool a turbo and flame-shoot on downshifts even though it’s smaller than my thumb. Both cars are Turbo Racing C-series micros (C75 / C76 style). They’re 2-wheel drive, 2.4GHz radio, internal LiPo, and they’ll run for around 20-30 minutes on a charge. The transmitter doubles as a charger, so you literally pull off, pit stop, and you’re back on track. We’ve got headlights, brake lights, proportional control, and yes — they drift and slide around if you push them hard enough. On a tabletop. In your house. This is dangerous because now racing after supper is “a thing.” Why I’m freaking out about these: They’re REAL RC cars. Steering isn’t just left/right clicky junk — you can feather it. They’re tiny enough to build a racetrack out of whatever’s on your dining table. The bodies are inspired by actual dream cars. Hellcat attitude vs Evo aggression. They’re stupid fun to crash into your friends with while pretending you’re being “technical.” We tested them side by side, we talked smack, and we found out which one can actually hang through the corners without spinning out… and which driver is going to be stuck doing dishes tonight. Welcome to 1:76 scale chaos. 🔥 This is why I love RC.