No traffic, no tickets, no rules — just vibes.
Forget road trips — Driving Simulator by Frame Synthesis lets you drive anywhere on Earth using real satellite imagery and a steering wheel made of pixels. It’s the ultimate lazy travel experience: no fuel costs, no speed limits, and no chance of getting lost (unless you count existentially).
The game is exactly what it sounds like — you “drive” across real-world maps stitched together from Google Earth-style views. Roads, cities, deserts, oceans — all yours to explore, badly. It’s a little janky, occasionally disorienting, and weirdly relaxing.
You can switch between different locations, try to keep your car vaguely on the road, or just ignore civilisation entirely and drive straight into the sea. The physics are minimal, the graphics are grainy, but somehow it’s still addictive. It’s like meditating through chaos — one slow turn at a time.
Driving Simulator is a reminder that sometimes you don’t need missions, leaderboards, or realism. Sometimes, you just need to click “start engine,” hum your own soundtrack, and drive through satellite photos like a very confused god.
Perfect for procrastinators who want to feel productive (“technically, I’m exploring the planet”) or anyone who’s ever shouted at Google Maps for fun.