City

No Limits: Race Car Ramp Track

A hot dog and a toilet racing down a ramp, and somehow that is exactly the point.

Brick Rated Score

4.2 out of 54.2/5

Set 60460 · 2025

Pieces436
Minifigs4
Year2025
Set number60460

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The verdict

I laughed the first time I understood what this set actually was.

You build a tall ramp, load up a hot dog shaped car or a toilet shaped car at the peak, flick a lever, and watch them go flying down the track. It is silly in the best way, and the building itself is more interesting than a simple ramp has any right to be. This is a set for the kid (or the kid at heart) who wants to build something and then immediately start playing with it, not display it on a shelf.

Best for: kids around 6 to 9 who want a fast, funny build they can play with the same afternoon

The full review

What it is

This is one of those City sets that is smart about what kids actually want to do with LEGO, which is build it fast and then play with it immediately. The ramp goes together quickly and there is a real spring loaded lever mechanism at the top that launches your racer down the track, so the fun does not stop the moment the last brick clicks in. The two soapbox racers, one shaped like a hot dog on wheels and one shaped like a toilet, are genuinely clever little builds with printed tile details instead of stickers, which is a small thing that matters a lot once a set has been played with for a year.

The catch

I will be honest about where it falls short. The ramp structure itself, once you strip away the novelty of the launch mechanism, is a fairly simple frame, and a couple of reviewers felt the piece count leans a bit generous relative to how much actual building complexity is here. The play pattern is also repetitive by design: load the car, flick the lever, walk over and grab it, do it again. That is exactly what a six year old wants on a Tuesday afternoon, but it is not a set that rewards a rebuild or a display shelf the way a bigger vehicle set would.

Who it's for

Get this one if you have a younger builder who wants instant, physical, laugh out loud play rather than a slow methodical build, or if you just want a genuinely funny little set to have on hand. Skip it if you are shopping for an older kid who wants engineering depth, or if you specifically want enough racers for two kids to compete side by side without sharing.

The parts story

What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.

Building this one feels quick and satisfying rather than technical. You are putting together a tower and ramp frame first, which goes together in big obvious chunks, then the two little racer cars, which are where the actual charm lives. The hot dog car and the toilet car are compact builds, maybe ten minutes each, but they are packed with personality, and kids figure out the launch mechanism almost instantly once the ramp is standing.

The standout here is restraint on stickers. Every printed detail, the hot dog bun texture, the toilet seat, the little signage around the ramp, comes on printed tiles and panels rather than stickers, which is worth calling out because it is the difference between a set that still looks sharp in three years and one with peeling, bubbled stickers. There is no rare or exclusive minifigure printing to chase here, this is a straightforward, honestly priced play set where the value is in the mechanism and the two racer builds rather than in parts you would hunt down individually.

Fun facts

  • 01The set includes 4 minifigures, among them a hot dog vendor and plumber themed drivers who match their respective racers.
  • 02Both racers avoid stickers entirely in favor of printed elements, something reviewers specifically called out as a nice touch at this price point.
  • 03The set has an official retail price of 49.99 USD / 44.99 GBP / 49.99 EUR.
  • 04Fan builders on sites like Tips and Bricks have posted 'set upgrade' projects expanding the ramp into a much longer custom race track using this set as the base.

What other builders say

This write-up is grounded in real reviews and builder discussion, not just one opinion. A few worth reading:

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