Dr. Driving
Dr. Driving delivers tense city challenges and quick sessions
Dr. Driving takes a surprisingly different route from typical racing titles, focusing less on breakneck speed and more on everyday driving skills. Instead of flying around circuits, you’ll be threading through city traffic, squeezing into tight parking spaces and managing fuel, all under strict time limits.
The gameplay is mission-based, with short, snackable challenges that are perfect for quick play sessions. Objectives range from basic city cruising and careful lane changes to tricky reverse parking and fuel‑saving runs. It may sound mundane on paper, but the pressure of timers, traffic and failure penalties makes each run feel oddly intense and satisfying.
Controls are straightforward: an on‑screen steering wheel or touch controls, plus pedals for acceleration and braking, and a simple gear selector. They respond well, and the slightly floaty handling actually helps keep the experience accessible, even if you’re not used to driving simulators.
Visually, Dr. Driving isn’t aiming for realism, but its clean 3D graphics are clear and functional. Vehicles and environments are simple yet readable, which is crucial when you’re trying to judge distances in a tight corner or a narrow parking slot. Performance is smooth on most devices, even older ones.
A big plus is online multiplayer support via Google sign‑in. You can challenge other players in real time or compete for better mission times, which adds replay value beyond simply grinding for coins and new cars.
The downside is an aggressive ad presence and a progression system that nudges you toward in‑app purchases for faster car upgrades. Some missions can also feel repetitive over time.
Still, if you enjoy skill‑based driving, mastering tight maneuvers and beating your own records, Dr. Driving offers a surprisingly addictive twist on the genre.
package name
com.ansangha.drdriving
language(s)
English
available on

from
SUD Inc.