Real Racing 3 is the third instalment from the star racing franchise of Electronic Arts in Android. Its principal difference in regard to the last productions is that this time the game is totally free...although the game is full of shopping.

In spite of this bad payment method, Real Racing 3 is an interesting racing game, its control system is perfectly adapted to touch devices, and will allow us to compete online against many players from around the world.


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Furthermore, on a graphic level its possible that Real Racing 3 is one of the best titles in Google Play, with spectacular detail regarding the cars. To this realism, we have to add that the cars represent real models, so we will recognise many of them at a glance.

If you keep up with news about mobile games at all, you've likely heard complaints about Real Racing 3. It's a free game, but one that reviewers have complained could cost you over $500 in real-world money. On the other hand, it's one of the most downloaded games on the App Store, with great ratings by users. So who should you believe?

After playing Real Racing 3 off-and-on for several weeks, I've found that it falls on the good side of my freemium game scale. Here's why: you really can play it 100% for free. It's good enough, I'd highly recommend you download it from the App Store or Google Play Store, depending on your device, if you enjoy racing games at all.

That's my short review: Real Racing 3 is great fun, and while there's in-app purchases at almost every turn, you can play as much as you want for free. The graphics are beautiful, the racing simulation is fun, it works perfectly even if you're offline, and I'm surprised it's received as many complaints as it has.

Want to keep from having to get so many repairs, and have a better shot at winning a race? Break ahead of the pack of cars (as many as 22 in some races) as soon as possible. Otherwise, you'll end up slamming into other cars throughout the race. Also, stay on the track: you'll go faster, and need less repairs (yes, driving on dirt seems to damage your car far faster than it would in real-life).

Upgrades will take time to be delivered, but you can keep racing your car while waiting for upgrades to come, albeit without the extra performance. Yes, you can pay coins to get upgrades immediately, but I'd again recommend not using coins to speed things up. If you want an upgrade that costs coins, use them there, but don't use coins to speed things up unless you're ready to shell out real world dollars to buy more coins. There's also one more upgrade you can use coins for: changing your car's color. Yup, that's another coin use I'd strongly recommend against.

Yet another option is spending real-world money for a car pack. There's several car packs that include one or more cars and some gold for, say, a couple real-world dollars. That's not such a bad price if you want more racing fun without waiting for in-app winnings.

There's also the crazy spectrum here: there's supercars that over RS$2.2 million, as well as ones that cost 400 and 800 coins, respectively. Those would cost you $40-$80 in real-world money if you were to buy them with in-app purchases, and would take more time to earn with in-app winnings than most of us would ever play a mobile game. But, still, most of the cars are well within the approachable price range for purchasing them with a reasonable amount of in-app winnings.

One more final thing on cars: they, too, take time to get delivered, and the wait time seems to go up with the value of the car. You could pay coins to get your car immediately, but again, I'd advise just waiting. Perhaps buy a car at the end of your racing session, and the next time you're ready to race, you'll have a new car waiting for you to drive. Not bad.

Now, the racing is not terribly realistic. AI cars have a tendency to slam into your car far more than I've ever seen in a racing game, almost seeming to want to damage your car. And no matter how fast your car is, it's almost impossible to overtake the best AI cars when you're going straight, though you're guaranteed to overtake them on turns.

But you know what? It's still fun as far as racing games go. If you loved the classic Need for Speed games back in the '90's, you'll find Real Racing 3 just as enjoyable, if not more so with the high res graphics. And it also works 100% fine offline, something that can't be said for every game these days (even EA's own SimCity requires an internet connection to play now).

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Ironically, while this 'feature' supposedly forces you to be online more often than you may like to be, if you understand how to make use of it, you'll find yourself playing offline more often than you intended to! This is because of a bug inherent to the update v3.5.2 and related to the server sync process. And yes, it can help you progress in the game quicker than you think. I've added a short video at the very end of the blog, and you might want to skip to that if you are only interested in the "how" of the method, not the "why", If the "why" interests you however, here is the long version! 

You put your car on servicing and your device, if online, intimates the server about the same, which makes a note of it. So while your device starts counting down the minutes till your car is fully serviced, the server is performing a twin countdown. And the programming is such that the server won't allow for the servicing to complete until the countdown on the server has run down to zero. And since none of us can influence the server's time-keeping, theoretically, we can't tamper with service times by changing time locally on our device. This is also why many of us would have experienced that sometimes the countdown timer freezes if we are offline or temporarily disconnected from the internet. But once we go back online, the countdown syncs with the server countdown again, and we get our car serviced back to us on time, if it's due. So it's a harmless feature, or so FM would have us believe. It's not like that if a car takes x minutes for servicing, we have to be online for the entire duration of x minutes. You can be offline for a while, and come back online anytime after x minutes have passed and claim your serviced car. But the server ensures that no matter what we do, we can't get back the car before x minutes. A pretty solid way to stop us from cheating..or is it?


The moment the servers are in the dark, they have no idea of what you are doing in the game. And when the game does go back online, it has a stack of data of what you have been doing all this time, that it passes on to the servers. Among other things such as your race statistics, what races you ran, what trophies you won, and how much R$ and fame you accrued, it also hands over the list of cars queued up for servicing, but not WHEN the car was put on servicing. And this is the important bit here. Say, for example, you want to race the Porsche 919 Hybrid 2014 on the 10 lapper of LeMans in Endurance Kings, which takes slightly under 30 minutes, and then you put it on servicing which should take you a further 02 hours. Normally, whether you race online or offline, nothing changes. But now because the servers are calling the shots, and not your device, you can fool the system if you race offline. Because the moment the server reconnects with your device, and sees that your Porsche is in queue for servicing, it doesn't listen to your device telling it that the servicing needs 2 hours. Instead, the servers decide that they must count down from the moment that they lost contact with your device, so as not to cause a time keeping error. So if you have been racing offline this entire time, the time that you spent offline including the time you were racing also gets counted in the service time-keeping, and you have to wait that much time less. So, if you went offline just before the race, and took 28 min to complete the 10 lapper, put it on servicing, and then went online, you'll see that the countdown timer now shows ~1h 30 min instead of 2h that was counting down while device was offline a minute ago.

"All this is great, but how does it help me?!!", you might ask. This knowledge doesn't let you farm additional gold coins, for sure, but it lets you save time. Consider a situation where you want to race a bunch of cars, of which car X has the maximum servicing time of 90min. If you choose to race offline for 90 minutes, you can race all these cars within this time period, multiple times if the service condition allows for it, and get back the cars fully serviced instantly by going online after the last race, even if car X was the last car you raced and put on servicing just before going online. Say, for instance, you can't help but go offline for 6 hrs (Work, sleep, commute/travel, movies- take your pick), when you come back to RR3, don't go online right away. Race all your races, and put them in servicing. And then go online. Since none of the cars in RR3 have a service interval of 6 hrs ( The max is 5h 25min, I think), you'll see that all your cars have been magically delivered back to you the moment you go online. ff782bc1db

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