Ever wanted to recreate those crazy GTA police chases without the open-world grind? This is pure vehicular mayhem stripped down to the basics. Pick your side—chase criminals as a cop or become the most wanted driver on the road. Smash through traffic, watch cars crumple with every hit, and push your driving skills to the limit across four wild maps. It's all about speed, crashes, and seeing how much metal you can bend before everything falls apart.
Jump in and start wrecking—the learning curve is short, but surviving at high speeds takes practice.
You start by picking a map, then decide if you're the hunter or the hunted. After that, select your car from the garage. Some vehicles handle better in tight city turns, while others dominate the desert straightaways. Use WASD to steer, Space for the handbrake when you need to drift around corners, and Left Shift to activate nitro boost. On mobile, you've got on-screen pedals and arrow buttons—simple enough.
If you're the cop, your job is to ram criminals off the road or box them in until they can't move. As the criminal, you're dodging traffic, using shortcuts, and hitting the nitro at the right moments to create distance. The B key slows down time when you're about to crash—use it to thread through tight gaps or line up the perfect T-bone. Press R to flip your car back over when you inevitably roll it, and F2 to respawn if you get completely stuck.
The longer you last, the more battered your car becomes. Wheels pop off, engines smoke, and eventually you're dragging metal across the pavement. Press N to swap to a fresh car mid-chase and keep the pursuit going. The goal is outlasting your opponent—whether that means catching every criminal on the map or evading capture until the cops give up.
This one's for players who just want to jump into the action without tutorials or complex systems. Perfect for kids and casual gamers who love car crashes and police chases but don't want the commitment of a full racing sim. If you've got 15 minutes and a craving for vehicular chaos, this delivers. Hardcore racing fans might find it too simple, but for quick destruction therapy? It hits the spot.
It's fast, loud, and messy. The graphics are basic—think early mobile game quality with repetitive textures and simple lighting—but the physics make up for it. Watching a car door rip off and tumble down the highway never gets old. The maps are pretty bare-bones with generic trees and flat terrain, but that keeps the focus on the chases. Audio is what you'd expect: engine roars, crunching metal, and sirens blaring. It's not pretty, but it's honest about what it is—a crash simulator that doesn't pretend to be anything else.
The game saves your progress automatically through browser cache, so you can pick up where you left off. Just don't clear your cookies or you'll lose everything. Performance-wise, it runs smoothly even on older hardware—I tested it on a mid-range laptop and had zero lag, even with multiple cars smashing into each other. The low-poly models and simple textures mean it'll work on pretty much any device from the last five years. Mobile version runs just as well, though the touch controls take a minute to get used to.
A solid pick if you want instant vehicular destruction without the baggage of story modes or progression systems.
Responsive enough for what the game demands. Desktop controls feel tight, though the handbrake is a bit touchy. Mobile works but expect some overcorrection with the virtual buttons.
Developed by Daniel and released on January 22, 2026. It's a solo dev project focused on delivering straightforward destruction physics without the bloat.