Highway Traffic's lane weaving, weather shifts, and four solo modes
In Highway Traffic, you pick a car and stay sharp as you thread through highway lanes, dodge crashes, and keep the run alive while rain or daylight changes the view ahead. The pressure comes from steady traffic, not from jumps or stunts, so every move is about reading gaps and holding your line.
As a racing game, it leans into road control instead of lap counting, which makes each overtake feel deliberate rather than rushed.
The four single-player modes give you room to swap between shorter sprints and longer highway sessions. The cars range from a classic sedan to a modern sports car, and the smooth control setup makes small steering corrections easy when one lane slows down. Because you can choose the car, the weather, and the time of day, a second run can feel very different before the first corner.
Weather, traffic pressure, and car choice on every run
The traffic is the real obstacle here, because one late brake tap can turn a safe lane change into a crash. Pick the weather and time of day before you start, then use the changing visibility to plan how aggressively you pass slower cars.
That loop puts it close to Traffic Jam 3d, since both games make you survive dense road flow, and it also echoes Traffic Tour with its focus on speed, lane switching, and highway pacing. If you want a more sim-style angle, Real Driving: City Car Simulator shares the same emphasis on careful steering through moving traffic.
It runs as a free online browser game with no download and no signup, so you can play on mobile or desktop and test a new setup in seconds.
Platform
Browser Desktop , Mobile and Tablet
Release
13 december 2018
Last Update
13 december 2018