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These guys do things with RC cars and boats you wish you thought of first

The Texas trick-shot artists known as Dude Perfect take some Traxxas radio-controlled cars and boats out for a spin in ways that would definitely void their warranties.

Danny Gallagher
CNET freelancer Danny Gallagher has contributed to Cracked.com, Mental Floss, Maxim, Break.com, Mandatory, Jackbox Games, Geeks Who Drink and many, many other publications in his never-ending quest to bring the world's productivity to a screeching halt. He lives and works in Dallas. Email Danny.
Danny Gallagher
2 min read

These drift racers from RC carmaker Traxxas are about to be used in a way they shouldn't be used -- unless your goal is to break them so no one else can play with them. Video screenshot by Danny Gallagher/CNET

Radio-controlled cars were the ultimate toy when I was a kid. The commercials for cars like Tyco's Scorcher and The Claw made them look like miniature models for some kind of military-grade assault or transport vehicle instead of an overpriced hunk of imported plastic.

Unfortunately, I didn't live near a desert landscape or a rock quarry with naturally angled jumps and obstacles that could make the cars look as aesthetically eye-catching as they did in the commercials. In fact, they didn't last very long, because I'd always drive them through the first puddle I came across to replicate their TV awesomeness. All that did was teach me a lesson about the limits of electricity.

The dudes behind Dude Perfect, a Texas-based collective of trick-shot artists who do for sports what Epic Meal Time does for food and diabetes, recently got their mitts on a bunch of radio- controlled cars and boats from Traxxas, another Texas company that manufactures high-powered RC vehicles.

So, naturally, they decided to take them out for a spin and couldn't resist turning their outing into a series of friendly competitions that I wish I thought of when I played with RC cars. They also released a video of their showdown that's filled with more high fives and bro screams than a Hootie and the Blowfish concert from 1994.

The competition features three preliminary events, including an RC car-bowling tournament that replaces the bowling ball with an RC car, a fishing challenge in which competitors aim to catch the biggest fish by tying a trawling line to an RC boat, and a rally race on a figure-eight track. The three winners of those challenges will face off in a final round for the ultimate prize. The winner doesn't get a big cash reward or a giant trophy to hoist above his head. All he gets is bragging rights that he can hold over his friends' heads.

And if you've ever competed in a ridiculous, impromptu showdown with your friends such as a one-legged hop race in an office hallway or a game of Horse with Nerf guns, you know that's worth a hell of a lot more than an oversize check and a photo op.