Ever wanted that PowerWash Simulator satisfaction without spending a dime? This is basically the mobile clone of that viral cleaning game, and honestly, it nails the core loop. You're running a car wash where you scrub, spray, vacuum, and polish vehicles until they're spotless. It's a casual cleaning game built entirely around that weirdly satisfying feeling of wiping dirt away—perfect for killing time or zoning out after a stressful day.
Getting started takes about 10 seconds—staying hooked takes way longer than you'd expect.
You tap or click on a tool icon at the bottom (spray bottle, sponge, vacuum, etc.), then drag it across the dirty parts of the car. The game highlights what's filthy with a darker texture overlay, and you literally just erase it by swiping. It's mindless in the best way. On mobile, you use your finger; on desktop, it's all mouse-based dragging. The controls are super responsive—no lag or weird hitbox issues.
The main challenge—and I'm using that word loosely—is making sure you don't miss any tiny dirt patches. Some are hidden in corners of the dashboard or under seat edges. If you rush, you'll leave streaks and have to go back. It's not hard, just mildly tedious if you're impatient. Each car has multiple stages: exterior wash, interior vacuum, scratch repair, and final polish.
After finishing a car, you earn currency to unlock fancier vehicles—sports cars, SUVs, trucks. There's no real endgame here; it's just a loop of "clean car, get new car, repeat." I didn't see any obvious paywalls in my session, but the structure screams "rewarded ads for boosts" if you play the mobile version long enough.
This is 100% for casual players who want something brainless and satisfying. If you're the type who watches ASMR cleaning videos or loves organizing games, you'll vibe with this. Kids can play it easily—there's zero violence or stress. It's also great for multitasking; I played a few rounds while half-listening to a podcast. Hardcore gamers? You'll be bored in five minutes. There's no skill ceiling, no competition, no stakes.
It's super meditative. The sound effects—water spraying, vacuum humming, cloth wiping—are clearly designed to trigger that ASMR satisfaction. Visually, it's basic mobile quality. The cars look decent because they're based on real photos, but the backgrounds are flat and static. The dirt textures are just simple masks that fade out when you swipe over them. It's not pretty, but it doesn't need to be. The whole experience is about that dopamine hit when a dirty panel turns shiny. No music to speak of, just ambient garage sounds. Honestly, it gets repetitive after 20 minutes, but in short bursts, it works.
The game saves your progress automatically in your browser's local storage, so you can close the tab and come back later without losing anything. Just don't clear your cache like a maniac. Performance-wise, this runs on a potato. It's built in Unity with super lightweight assets, so even older phones or budget laptops should handle it fine. I didn't notice any frame drops or crashes during my session.
A solid time-waster if you're into low-stress, repetitive satisfaction loops. Just don't expect innovation.
Dead simple and totally responsive. No complaints here—the drag detection works flawlessly.
Developed by Drivix Games and released on November 10, 2025. It's a fresh release, so expect potential updates or (more likely) ad integration down the line.