Hazmob FPS: Online Shooter
Sprunki World Online RP - Play with Friends!
Online Car Destruction Simulator 3D
99 Nights in the Forest. Horror MultiplayerDriver Online Cars
Driver Online Cars - Play Online
Picture this: You boot up the game expecting something like the free-roaming chaos of GTA, but what you actually get is a mostly empty parking lot simulator with shiny cars. Driver Online Cars is an open-world driving game where you cruise around a bare-bones map, drift around gas stations, and collect vehicles. It's competitive in the sense that you're racing against boredom. The cars look surprisingly good—the map? Not so much.
Key Features
- Multiple Car Models: A decent garage of BMW, Porsche, and Mercedes-style rides to choose from.
- Open World Map: Drive freely around an environment that feels like an early Unity tutorial project.
- Drift Mode: Toggle a dedicated drift system with the U key for sliding around corners.
- Multiplayer Option: You can technically drive with friends, though the empty world makes it feel like a ghost town meetup.
How to Play Driver Online Cars
Getting started is simple—staying entertained is the real challenge.
Pick Your Ride and Hit the Road
You start by selecting a car from the garage. Use WASD or arrow keys to drive, space bar for the handbrake, and C to switch camera angles. The cars handle with exaggerated physics that make every turn feel slippery, even on dry pavement. Press U to toggle drift mode if you want to slide around like you're auditioning for Fast and Furious on a budget.
Explore the Barren Wasteland
The "open world" is essentially a flat stretch of asphalt with a gas station, some shipping containers, and hills covered in stretched textures. There's no traffic, no pedestrians, no missions—just you and the road. You can repair your car with F2 if you manage to damage it, and toggle headlights with L, though there's no day/night cycle to make that useful.
Compete... Sort Of
The game mentions races and competitive elements, but during my time cruising around, I mostly just drove in circles trying to find something to do. The multiplayer aspect means other players might show up, but the lack of structured events makes it feel more like a car meet than actual competition.
Who is Driver Online Cars for?
This one's aimed squarely at younger players who just want to mess around with cool-looking cars without the pressure of actual racing mechanics. If you're a 12-year-old who dreams of driving a BMW and has low expectations for graphics, you might get 20 minutes of fun out of this. Hardcore racing fans will bounce off immediately—there's just not enough here.
The Gameplay Vibe
It's weirdly calm and lonely. The physics are goofy enough to produce some unintentional comedy when your suspension breaks and your car tilts at bizarre angles, but that novelty wears off fast. The environment is dead silent except for generic engine sounds. Visually, the cars are the only thing worth looking at—they're clearly purchased assets that got dropped into a world that looks like it was built in a weekend. The lighting is flat, shadows are blob-shaped, and the skybox is the definition of "default Unity asset."
Technical Check: Saves & Performance
The game saves your progress and car selection in browser cache, so don't clear your cookies unless you want to start over. Performance-wise, it runs smoothly even on older hardware—the low-poly environment and basic shaders mean pretty much any device from the last five years can handle it. The Unity web build loads relatively fast, which is honestly the best thing I can say about the technical side.
Quick Verdict: Pros & Cons
A car sandbox that prioritizes vehicle models over everything else. Fun for about 15 minutes.
- ✅ Pro: The car models actually look decent and detailed.
- ✅ Pro: Runs on basically any device without lag.
- ❌ Con: The world is so empty it feels unfinished—there's nothing to actually do.
Controls
Responsive enough, though the drift physics feel overly sensitive. You'll get used to it quickly.
- Desktop: WASD or Arrow Keys to drive, Space for handbrake, U for drift mode, F2 to repair, L for headlights, C for camera.
- Mobile: Touch controls with on-screen buttons (though the experience is clearly designed for keyboard).
Release Date & Developer
Developed by Vay Game and released on March 26, 2025. It's a Unity-based browser game that feels like it was thrown together to capitalize on the "drift simulator" trend.

