MotorCubs RC is an offroad RC racing game built around a simple, instantly appealing idea: tiny vehicles, big terrain, and fearless crash-test teddy bears taking the hits. Set against dramatic Monument Valley-inspired scenery, the game focuses on surviving harsh tracks where the environment is as much the opponent as the clock.

Whether you’re chasing clean laps alone or trading paint in offline co-op, MotorCubs RC leans into chunky physicality—rocks that shove you off-line, foliage that obscures your approach, and the kind of flaming wreckage that turns a “safe” line into a last-second improvisation.

What You Do in MotorCubs RC

At its core, MotorCubs RC is about picking the right vehicle class for the job and learning how each track punishes overconfidence. You’ll race across 8 tough tracks (with more planned), navigating technical routes that reward throttle control, smart positioning, and choosing when to muscle through obstacles versus when to thread the needle.

Offline Solo and Co-Op Racing

MotorCubs RC supports both single-player and offline co-op racing. That makes it a good fit for Mac players who want a couch-friendly racer without relying on servers, accounts, or always-online requirements. The tracks are designed to be challenging, so having a co-op partner can turn the game into a mix of teamwork, rivalry, and shared disasters when a bad bounce sends someone into the scenery.

Four Vehicle Classes (And Why Size Matters)

The game’s handling variety comes from its four vehicle classes, each built for different approaches to the same brutal terrain:

  • Compact: Smaller and more nimble. Great for tight lines and quick corrections when the course gets technical.
  • Sport: Tuned for speed and responsiveness, rewarding confident driving and clean cornering.
  • Mud Plugger: Designed for messy conditions and rougher surfaces—ideal when traction and stability matter more than top speed.
  • Titan: The heavyweight option. Bigger vehicles can better bully through hazards and uneven terrain, making them a smart pick for obstacle-dense tracks.

In MotorCubs RC, bigger often means more survivable. The larger classes are better at dealing with the game’s interactive environments—shoving through clutter and maintaining momentum where lighter builds might get bounced or stalled.

Interactive Tracks: Rocks, Foliage, and Flaming Wreckage

Instead of feeling like flat race circuits, MotorCubs RC’s courses emphasize terrain that fights back. Expect moments where a rock you clipped at the wrong angle sends you into a cascade of lost speed, or where visibility gets messy and you have to commit to a line before you can fully read what’s ahead.

This is where the game’s personality shines: it’s not just “drive fast,” it’s “drive smart,” because surviving a lap can be just as important as optimizing it.

Who It’s For

  • Mac players looking for an offline racer with meaningful difficulty.
  • Fans of arcade offroad handling with an emphasis on terrain interaction.
  • Anyone who wants a local co-op game that’s easy to start but hard to master.
  • Players who enjoy experimenting with vehicle types to solve track-specific problems.

Mac System Requirements

Minimum

  • OS: OSX Ventura
  • Processor: Intel and M1
  • Memory: 8 GB RAM
  • Graphics: Intel Iris
  • Storage: 14 GB available space
  • Additional Notes: Older OSX versions might be compatible

Recommended

  • OS: OSX Ventura
  • Processor: Intel and M1
  • Memory: 16 GB RAM
  • Graphics: M1 Pro (14 GPU Cores)
  • Storage: 14 GB available space
  • Additional Notes: Older OSX versions might be compatible

The Takeaway

MotorCubs RC brings a charmingly chaotic theme—crash-test teddy bear drivers—into a racer that’s more demanding than it first appears. With eight punishing tracks, four distinct vehicle classes, and the option to play solo or offline co-op, it’s a strong pick for Mac gamers who want an offroad RC racer where the terrain isn’t just scenery—it’s the main event.