Real City Driving 2: empty streets, harmless crashes, and the city border
Choose from the available cars in Real City Driving 2 and cruise a mostly deserted city map where traffic is scarce, pedestrians are rare, and collisions do not punish your vehicle. You can tap walls, buildings, and curbs as much as you want, but the boundary at the edge of the city still ends the run.
That setup fits the driving and races category with a free-roam twist, because there is no lap count or finish line to chase. Instead, you spend your time learning the streets, checking how the car handles tight turns, and pushing the map until the border stops you.
The feel is close to Grand Vegas Simulator, since both games give you a city sandbox with room to drive without constant traffic. Real Driving: City Car Simulator is another good match for the same open urban setup, while Challenger City Driver shares the same city-driving angle and keeps the focus on roads and corners.
Because the game runs in your browser, you get a no download session that loads fast and keeps the focus on steering rather than setup. The sparse road layout also makes it easy to test short bursts of speed, sharp turns, and slow rolls through intersections without dealing with heavy traffic.
Empty intersections and no-damage collisions
With almost nothing blocking the roads, you can repeat the same corner, smash the same wall, and compare how each car behaves on the same block. That makes the game useful for relaxed practice, especially if you want a quick drive on desktop or mobile-friendly screens.
Platform
Browser Desktop , Mobile and Tablet
Release
08 july 2020
Last Update
08 july 2020