Logic Pro X 10.3.3 MAS [TNT].dmg

Premium Access Only

The hosting period for this file has now expired, only paid users can download it.
To download this file, you must first subscribe to a paid plan

×

File retrieval required

This file has been archived after a prolonged period of inactivity, subscribe to a plan to request a retrieval and we will email you when the file is ready.
This typically takes less than 24 hours, but can take a maximum of 48 hours.
×
Subscribe to download ($9.99/month)
File created:   |   File expired on:   |   File Size: 1.3 GB   |   Report file for violation

Upload files for free, without registration

Uploadfiles makes file sharing and storage easy and straightforward.
Our encrypted cloud storage uses the latest security techniques to keep your data safe and protected at all times. Create a link to share files for free.

Upload any file type

Upload any file type

There are no restrictions on the type of file you can upload to our free filesharing platform. The only limit we put in place is a 5GB max filesize for free users and up to as much as 100GB for business users.

We put our users in control, which is one of the reasons why Uploadfiles is in the most popular file sharing sites in the world.

Learn more about supported file types »
Upload files globally

Share files for free,
anywhere in the world

Uploadfiles deploys a wide range of data centres located in various regions across the world. This enables us to ensure lightning fast file sharing capabilities to our customers at all times. Whether you have files for download, or just want to upload and share, you can rely on us 24/7, 365 days a year.

Learn more about our network »
Upload files securely with end to end encryption

No pop ups, no malware

Fed up of pop-up ads, push notifications, malware, bitcoin miners and ‘quizzes’ that could infect your laptop or desktop with malware? So are we, which is why you will never see any of these on Uploadfiles. Too many file hosting platforms are driven by profit, which means your safety comes a distant second. For us it’s the other way round, giving you the confidence that you can remain safe no matter how long you spend on our file upload site.

For the player who misses the days of sinking quarters into Daytona USA , who wants a drift system that punishes and teaches in equal measure, and who doesn't need a career mode filled with fluff, Hotshot Racing is a hidden gem. It is a game that knows exactly what it is: a pure, unadulterated test of nerve, timing, and the perfect slide. Just be prepared to fight the rubberband—and your own Joy-Cons.

Where Hotshot Racing stumbles is in its progression. There are no car upgrades, no loot boxes, no cosmetic unlocks beyond simple paint jobs. You earn "rep" and unlock new drivers, but they all drive identically within their class. This purity is admirable for purists but feels sparse for modern players. The "Cops and Robbers" mode adds a twist, but the core remains: mastery of the drift-boost-drift loop is the only goal. Hotshot Racing (NSP) is not a casual racing game. It is a harsh, precise, and deeply rewarding arcade experience disguised in friendly, blocky graphics. It demands you learn its physics like you would learn a fighting game's combo system. The Switch version offers the dream of portable high-speed drifting, but only with the right controller.

At a glance, Hotshot Racing —developed by Lucky Mountain Games and published by Curve Digital—presents itself as a vibrant, low-poly throwback to the arcade racers of the late 1990s and early 2000s, specifically evoking Virtua Racing , Daytona USA , and Ridge Racer . But beneath its colorful, cel-shaded, and angular exterior lies a racing game of surprising mechanical rigor and a deeply considered (if narrow) design philosophy. The NSP (Nintendo Submission Package) version for the Switch is particularly revealing, as it tests the game's core thesis: can pure, high-skill drift mechanics and blistering speed translate to a portable, pick-up-and-play format without compromise? 1. Visual & Audio Aesthetic: The "Neon Drift" Paradox The first thing that strikes you is the art style. The low-polygon count is a deliberate homage, not a technical limitation. Characters have blocky fingers, cars are faceted, and trackside objects pop in with an almost charming abruptness. Yet, this is married to high-definition lighting, neon color palettes, and a buttery-smooth 60 frames-per-second target—even on Switch.

In a game where throttle control (feathering the gas to hold a drift) is paramount, having only on/off acceleration is brutal. The game compensates with an auto-accelerate option, but that removes a layer of control. To truly experience the game's depth, a Pro Controller (with analog triggers via an adapter) or playing in tabletop mode with a third-party controller is almost mandatory. The NSP version runs flawlessly in handheld mode—no frame drops—but the control scheme reveals the limits of the Switch hardware for a game so dependent on analog nuance. The game includes 4-player split-screen (a dying art) and 8-player online. The split-screen on Switch is a technical marvel, maintaining a playable frame rate. Online, however, is a ghost town for most players. The game's deep mechanics shine best against human opponents, where the aggressive AI rubberband is replaced by real, fallible decision-making.

Ready to go Pro?

Signup today and unlock all our features