1 review
think of it as "Bot-wars" meets "Prototype this" with a weekly theme. Two teams battle it out to beat the other team by destroying the opponents car by any means possible
Dudes armor-plate cars, mount them with machine guns and rockets, then hide in bunkers, operating them by remote control in an ultimate to-the-death Carmageddon.
From the "MythBusters" producers, The formula resembles a lot of those DIY reality shows: Two teams of master builders compete against each other to build the sicker, more destructive remote-controlled kill-mobile. They don't just tear up muscle cars (a la Animal House); these blokes use innocent shuttle buses and, ice cream vans, too.
Once built, there are two tiers of competition. First the weaponized cars have to blow up fuel depots or medieval fortresses, stuff that doesn't necessarily fight back, I suppose. In round two, it hits high gear, with "a gloves-off test" of combative capability and remote-control driver technique, until the smoke clears and there is only one vehicle left.
Dudes armor-plate cars, mount them with machine guns and rockets, then hide in bunkers, operating them by remote control in an ultimate to-the-death Carmageddon.
From the "MythBusters" producers, The formula resembles a lot of those DIY reality shows: Two teams of master builders compete against each other to build the sicker, more destructive remote-controlled kill-mobile. They don't just tear up muscle cars (a la Animal House); these blokes use innocent shuttle buses and, ice cream vans, too.
Once built, there are two tiers of competition. First the weaponized cars have to blow up fuel depots or medieval fortresses, stuff that doesn't necessarily fight back, I suppose. In round two, it hits high gear, with "a gloves-off test" of combative capability and remote-control driver technique, until the smoke clears and there is only one vehicle left.
- chosen-one87
- May 31, 2009
- Permalink