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Push it off a cliff, that's the best thing to do with these cheap taiwanese and chinese toys. Watch out for the lead paint too lol.
Sounds like you definitely have a carburetor problem. The first thing I would do is take the carb apart and clean everything out real good. It only takes a little bit of dirt, a spider leg (surpirsing how many spider legs can make it into a carb, it's weird) or anything like that will block your main jet and keep the engine from getting fuel when the throttle is opened about 1/2 of the way up to full throttle. Especially on these smaller, cheaper machines dirt in the carb tends to be a common problem. Not only are the vent lines usually run to poor locations where they aren't protected from contaminants, but also because a small engine with a small carb like this will have very small, easy to block passages and jets in them.
Sounds like you definitely have a carburetor problem. The first thing I would do is take the carb apart and clean everything out real good. It only takes a little bit of dirt, a spider leg (surpirsing how many spider legs can make it into a carb, it's weird) or anything like that will block your main jet and keep the engine from getting fuel when the throttle is opened about 1/2 of the way up to full throttle. Especially on these smaller, cheaper machines dirt in the carb tends to be a common problem. Not only are the vent lines usually run to poor locations where they aren't protected from contaminants, but also because a small engine with a small carb like this will have very small, easy to block passages and jets in them.