I Sent MJX Hyper Go 10210 to the Moon… Did It Survive? (Bash Test)
That was me this past weekend with the new 1/10 scale MJX Hyper Go 10210.You drag a sketchy plywood ramp out to the backyard—or find that perfect grassy mound at the local park—grab a fistful of throttle, and immediately hold your breath as your RC car turns into an airplane.
I took this rig out to the yard with one mission: find its breaking point. I hit my DIY ramp at full speed and sent it literally 15 feet into the air. It clipped a tree branch and landed terribly—a brutal cartwheel across the lawn that ended with a dead-stop slam into a concrete retaining wall.
Did it survive? Shockingly… yes. And after brushing off the grass and inspecting the chassis, I realized why. MJX didn’t just build a fast car; they built an absolute backyard tank. Here is why the 10210 is blowing up on the RC forums right now.
A Drivetrain That Refuses to Quit
When you’re ripping through thick lawn grass or landing hard on pavement under power, cheap gears strip. It’s a fact of RC life. But MJX threw in a full Chrome Steel Gear setup. I was doing standing backflips off tree roots, and the drivetrain didn’t even flinch. Paired with a 15T Motor Gear, it hits that perfect sweet spot between neighborhood speed-runs and enough low-end torque to tear up the mulch.
Overpowered in the Best Way Possible
Let’s talk electronics. Under the hood, this thing is packing a massive 3970 2500KV Brushless Motor. Honestly, the neighbor’s dog didn’t even stand a chance trying to chase it.
But here is the real kicker: they paired it with a monstrous 120A Brushless ESC. Forum guys, you know how huge this is. Backyard bashing usually means running pack after pack in the summer heat, with zero airflow through thick grass. A 120-amp ESC in a 1/10 scale rig means you have infinite overhead. You aren’t going to hit thermal shutdown; it just stays cool and keeps asking for more.
Dodging Obstacles with a 35KG Servo
Backyard and park bashing means you have to dodge lawn chairs, trees, and your own feet. Luckily, MJX slapped a ridiculous 35KG Servo in this truck. The steering authority via the 2.4G radio is razor-sharp. Even when the tires are buried in thick dirt, the wheels snap left and right instantly.
The Secret Armor: 7075 Aluminum
Remember that concrete wall slam I mentioned earlier? On any other budget car, the lower A-arms would have shattered like glass. But MJX did something brilliant: the lower suspension arms feature embedded 7075 Aluminum Alloy plates. You get the flexibility of nylon to absorb the shock of a bad park landing, reinforced by aerospace-grade 7075 aluminum to stop it from snapping.
The Verdict
I really tried to break the MJX Hyper Go 10210 in my backyard. But with its 120A ESC, chrome steel drivetrain, and 7075-reinforced arms, this rig just laughs at abuse. If you’re looking for a 1/10 scale park basher that you don’t have to immediately spend $100 on upgrades just to keep running, this is it.