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It sounds simple when you first load it up. But it's not. It's hilarious.
Developer: BestGameSpot.Com
- 4.7
- Score
I figured Monster Truck Parking would just be another casual driving game - you know, hop in a giant truck, roll around, call it a day. But nope. About two minutes in, I found myself sketching out janky rollercoaster tracks with my mouse, desperately trying to create a path that wouldn't immediately yeet my cargo into the abyss. This isn't just about driving - it's about designing the actual road your monster truck will drive on, then carefully steering it from start to finish without dumping your load or missing any gold stars. It sounds simple when you first load it up. It's not. It's hilarious. It's also way more addictive than you'd expect for a game that basically says, "Okay, you're the road engineer and the driver. Good luck." The early levels lull you into a false sense of confidence. Big open gaps, easy star placements, and tons of space to draw nice, gentle ramps. You're cruising along thinking, "Wow, I'm a genius road designer." And then the game hits you with weirder platform layouts, tighter jumps, awkward elevation changes - and suddenly you're scribbling desperate little squiggles across the screen, hoping your poor monster truck can actually climb that wobbly line you just panicked into existence. Even when you draw a halfway decent track, driving isn't a free ride either. You've got to balance carefully, tapping your forward and backward keys to keep from flipping over, especially if you want to snag all the stars without losing your cargo. It turns into this awesome mix of building, improvising, and precision driving, where no two levels feel exactly the same. What makes Monster Truck Parking such a fun time sink is how messy and creative it lets you be. There's no "one right way" to beat a level - you can draw wild loops, weird bridges, risky ramps - whatever you think will get the job done. And half the fun is watching your monster truck barely cling to some half-baked track you threw together and somehow still make it across. The visuals are simple and colorful, the controls are super responsive, and the fact that you have to both design and drive keeps your brain engaged way more than a normal parking game would. Whether you're trying to clear every level perfectly or just seeing how ridiculous your self-made roads can get, Monster Truck Parking hits that sweet spot between creative problem-solving and pure chaotic fun. Just be prepared: some of your tracks are going to look like absolute disasters - and that's kind of the point.