Compare Teddy Floppy Ear - The Race prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Forever Entertainment S. A.. Published by Forever Entertainment S. A.. Released on 5/22/2015. Available on PC. Genres: Sport, Single Player, Third Person, Simulation, Indie, Racing.

A kart racer built on a Polish children's cartoon IP, with five game modes, local split-screen, and handling that bites harder than it looks. Fun for small kids; rougher going for everyone else.

Teddy Floppy Ear - The Race is a kart combat racer from Forever Entertainment, set in the colourful world of Animalville - a universe pulled from a well-known Polish animated series. The pitch is simple: pick one of around sixteen anthropomorphic characters, grab a kart from a roster of ten models that lean into Eastern Bloc nostalgia (yes, there is a tractor), and race across five tracks that each come in a day and night variant, doubling the track count to ten in practice. Five game modes cover most of the kart-racer checklist: Single Race for a quick hit, Time Attack for ghost-chasing, Collector's Slalom for learning corners by grabbing stars along the ideal racing line, Racing Season for a progressive league structure, and Floppy Cup for a one-on-one knockout bracket. Cosmetic customisation runs to thirty hats and aesthetic kart tuning, so the garage loop exists even if it is shallow. On paper that is a reasonable feature set for a budget indie racer aimed at young players. In practice the handling is where things get complicated. The driving model is arcade but the physics carry more bite than the crayon-bright visuals suggest - clip a corner too fast and you spin out, and driving through water patches leaves your steering twitchy for a distracting few seconds afterward. There is no nitro or turbo to compensate, so races are decided largely by power-up luck. The weapon roster is wholesome - milk bottles that grow your kart to squash rivals, lemonade, mud splats, tacks, a fire extinguisher, and blue boots - inoffensive stuff that fits the IP but lacks the satisfying chaos of the genre's better entries. The Floppy Cup mode structures its tournament as strict one-on-one races rather than full grids, which drains some of the mayhem you'd want from a combat kart game. Controller support is the biggest practical concern in 2024. Community reports flag persistent axis-drift issues with Xbox controllers, where the game misreads stick input in menus and races alike. Keyboard is reportedly more reliable, and a dedicated steering wheel apparently suits the looser handling reasonably well - though wheeling up a children's kart racer feels like buying a racing seat for go-karting in your back garden. The game is capped at 30 FPS, which is a known fixed limitation. None of this has been patched in years, and the title has reportedly been delisted from Steam at various points, likely due to licensing around the source cartoon IP rather than technical upkeep. Split-screen is confirmed present, which is the one genuine bright spot for the core audience. If you have a young child who knows the Teddy Floppy Ear cartoon and wants to bash karts with a parent on the same sofa, the game does deliver that experience at a very low barrier to entry. The track visuals are clean, the characters are recognisable, and the four difficulty levels give some room to let a small kid win without making it insulting. For anyone older, the thin grid sizes, absent online mode, controller issues, and a handling model that does not quite land make this a hard sell. There are far more polished options in the budget kart-racing space, and the novelty of the Polish cartoon licence will only carry you so far. Riley, Scout Team

Teddy Floppy Ear - The Race
SportSingle PlayerThird PersonSimulationIndieRacing

Teddy Floppy Ear - The Race

May 22, 2015Forever Entertainment S. A.
GamerScout Says

A kart racer built on a Polish children's cartoon IP, with five game modes, local split-screen, and handling that bites harder than it looks. Fun for small kids; rougher going for everyone else.

PC
Best Price Available
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Historical low: €0.77

GamerScout Verdict

Best for parents co-playing with young Teddy Floppy Ear fans on the couch; too rough and thin for anyone else.

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About Teddy Floppy Ear - The Race

Teddy Floppy Ear - The Race is a kart combat racer from Forever Entertainment, set in the colourful world of Animalville - a universe pulled from a well-known Polish animated series. The pitch is simple: pick one of around sixteen anthropomorphic characters, grab a kart from a roster of ten models that lean into Eastern Bloc nostalgia (yes, there is a tractor), and race across five tracks that each come in a day and night variant, doubling the track count to ten in practice. Five game modes cover most of the kart-racer checklist: Single Race for a quick hit, Time Attack for ghost-chasing, Collector's Slalom for learning corners by grabbing stars along the ideal racing line, Racing Season for a progressive league structure, and Floppy Cup for a one-on-one knockout bracket. Cosmetic customisation runs to thirty hats and aesthetic kart tuning, so the garage loop exists even if it is shallow. On paper that is a reasonable feature set for a budget indie racer aimed at young players. In practice the handling is where things get complicated. The driving model is arcade but the physics carry more bite than the crayon-bright visuals suggest - clip a corner too fast and you spin out, and driving through water patches leaves your steering twitchy for a distracting few seconds afterward. There is no nitro or turbo to compensate, so races are decided largely by power-up luck. The weapon roster is wholesome - milk bottles that grow your kart to squash rivals, lemonade, mud splats, tacks, a fire extinguisher, and blue boots - inoffensive stuff that fits the IP but lacks the satisfying chaos of the genre's better entries. The Floppy Cup mode structures its tournament as strict one-on-one races rather than full grids, which drains some of the mayhem you'd want from a combat kart game. Controller support is the biggest practical concern in 2024. Community reports flag persistent axis-drift issues with Xbox controllers, where the game misreads stick input in menus and races alike. Keyboard is reportedly more reliable, and a dedicated steering wheel apparently suits the looser handling reasonably well - though wheeling up a children's kart racer feels like buying a racing seat for go-karting in your back garden. The game is capped at 30 FPS, which is a known fixed limitation. None of this has been patched in years, and the title has reportedly been delisted from Steam at various points, likely due to licensing around the source cartoon IP rather than technical upkeep. Split-screen is confirmed present, which is the one genuine bright spot for the core audience. If you have a young child who knows the Teddy Floppy Ear cartoon and wants to bash karts with a parent on the same sofa, the game does deliver that experience at a very low barrier to entry. The track visuals are clean, the characters are recognisable, and the four difficulty levels give some room to let a small kid win without making it insulting. For anyone older, the thin grid sizes, absent online mode, controller issues, and a handling model that does not quite land make this a hard sell. There are far more polished options in the budget kart-racing space, and the novelty of the Polish cartoon licence will only carry you so far.

Riley
Riley · Scout Team

Sports & racing

Tags

steamLocal Split-ScreenKart CombatPower-Up RacingChild-Friendly AestheticEastern European IP30 FPS CapController IssuesArcade Handling

System Requirements

Minimum

Graphics
nVidia GeForce 7800, ATI/AMD Radeaon HD2600/3600
Processor
Dual core Intel or AMD at 2.8 GHz
System requirements
Windows 7

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Game Info

Developer
Forever Entertainment S. A.
Publisher
Forever Entertainment S. A.
Release Date
May 22, 2015

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Teddy Floppy Ear - The Race is available on PC.

When was Teddy Floppy Ear - The Race released?

Teddy Floppy Ear - The Race was released on 22 May 2015.

Who developed Teddy Floppy Ear - The Race?

Teddy Floppy Ear - The Race was developed by Forever Entertainment S. A..