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Supercars in traffic - Play Online
Ever wanted to tear through city streets in a McLaren with police lights blazing, no consequences? Supercars in traffic drops you into an open-world sandbox where expensive cars meet total chaos. It's like a budget version of GTA's driving physics without the missions—just pure car carnage, drifting, and tuning. Pick a supercar, flip on the sirens, and cause mayhem in a low-poly city or test your skills in destructive obstacle courses filled with swinging hammers and barrels.
Key Features
- Fleet of Supercars: Drive McLarens, Lamborghinis, and other high-end rides with customizable colors and wheels.
- Dual Environments: Cruise through an open city or tackle physics-based destruction zones with moving obstacles.
- Full Customization: Change car colors, swap wheels, and equip police lights and sirens for that cop-car fantasy.
- Arcade Physics: Realistic destruction mechanics let you smash, drift, and barrel-roll without worrying about repair bills.
How to Play Supercars in traffic
Jump in and start driving—there's no tutorial holding your hand, which is honestly refreshing.
Pick Your Ride and Hit the Streets
You start by choosing a supercar from the garage. Use WASD or arrow keys to control your vehicle, space bar for the handbrake when you need to whip around corners. Press C to cycle camera views—third-person works best for navigating tight city streets. The controls are straightforward, though the cars feel floaty at first until you get used to the physics.
Cause Chaos or Tackle Obstacle Courses
The game splits into two modes. In the city, you're free to drive around, hit other cars, and test the destruction physics—buildings are invincible, but vehicles crumple satisfyingly. Switch to the obstacle course and you'll face giant swinging hammers, floating barrels, and ramps. Hit F for nitro boosts to launch yourself over gaps. The destruction model is the real star here—cars deform, doors fly off, and windshields shatter.
Tune Your Cars and Unlock New Models
Between drives, visit the tuning menu to change paint jobs and wheels. It's basic but lets you personalize your fleet. You earn currency by playing (though the progression feels vague), which unlocks new car models. Press Q for flashing lights, H for sirens, and E/R/T/Y for different signal horns—goofy additions that add personality to your joyrides.
Who is Supercars in traffic for?
This is aimed squarely at teens and casual players who just want to mess around with fast cars without complex missions or realistic driving sims. If you're the type who ignored GTA storylines and just caused traffic pileups, you'll feel right at home. It's not deep, but it's honest about what it is: a quick driving sandbox where you can blow off steam in 10-minute bursts. Definitely not for hardcore sim racers—the physics are too arcade-y and the AI traffic is brain-dead.
The Gameplay Vibe
The vibe is pure casual chaos. Visually, it's rough around the edges—flat lighting, repetitive building textures, and the cars look way better than the environments (classic asset clash). There's no music during gameplay, just engine sounds and crash effects, which makes it feel oddly quiet. The destruction physics are fun enough to keep you entertained, and watching a Lamborghini crumple after hitting a wall at 150 mph never gets old. It's the kind of game you play while listening to your own music or a podcast—meditative car destruction, if that's even a thing.
Technical Check: Saves & Performance
The game saves your progress and unlocked cars automatically through browser cache, so don't clear your history unless you want to start over. Performance-wise, it runs surprisingly smooth even on older PCs—the low-poly graphics mean weak hardware won't struggle. I noticed zero lag during high-speed chases or when multiple cars were crashing. Mobile version uses touch controls that work fine, though steering feels less precise than keyboard.
Quick Verdict: Pros & Cons
A solid time-waster if you want consequence-free car chaos without downloads.
- ✅ Pro: Instant action with zero learning curve—just pick a car and go.
- ✅ Pro: Satisfying destruction physics make every crash entertaining.
- ❌ Con: The city feels lifeless and repetitive after 20 minutes—no real goals or challenges beyond what you create.
Controls
Responsive enough for arcade driving, though the handbrake feels mushy and drifting takes practice.
- Desktop: WASD/Arrows to drive, Space for handbrake, F for nitro, C to change camera, Q/H for lights and sirens, Right mouse to adjust camera angle.
- Mobile: Touch controls with on-screen buttons for acceleration, steering, and special features.
Release Date & Developer
Developed by Narvik and released on November 13, 2024. It's built in Unity and clearly designed for mobile/browser audiences looking for quick driving fun.

