22/09/2025
sakit sa nose
Tamiya Mini 4WD isn’t just a racing toy—it’s a culture. For decades, it has brought together hobbyists of all ages who share the same thrill: building, tuning, and racing their own machines. What makes the hobby unique is not just the speed or the design of the cars, but the fairness of the game itself. Everyone, from beginners to veterans, races under the same rules, with the same parts available to all.
But lately, there’s a growing problem that threatens the very spirit of the hobby: unfair modifications. Open motors, fake brakes, and other illegal tweaks aren’t just bending the rules—they’re breaking the heart of the community.
Why Fairness Matters
The joy of Mini 4WD lies in creativity within limits. Tamiya designed the system so that performance comes from tuning, experimenting with gear ratios, rollers, weights, and aerodynamics—not from shortcuts that give an artificial edge. The rules exist to level the playing field, making victory sweeter because it’s earned, not bought or cheated.
When players use illegal modifications, it removes that balance. Suddenly, the game isn’t about skill or ingenuity anymore. It becomes about who is willing to compromise the spirit of the hobby. And when that happens, new racers get discouraged, communities shrink, and the excitement dies out.
No to Tamiyo workxz!