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Throws you into a glowing city full of ramps, coins, explosions, and a supercar with wings.
Developer: RHM Interactive OU
- 4.3
- Score
I didn't expect to spend half an hour flying a sports car through skyscrapers, but here we are. Ultimate Flying Car 2 is one of those games that doesn't ask you for permission - it just throws you into a glowing city full of ramps, coins, explosions, and gives you a supercar with wings. There's no long tutorial, no deep story - just speed, chaos, and a bunch of physics that make no real sense, but feel absolutely right when you're mid-air doing a front flip over a highway. It's fast, silly, and surprisingly hard to put down once you get into the rhythm of it. Controlling the car feels pretty intuitive, which is good, because the game encourages you to do a lot of ridiculous stuff. You drive like any racing game at first - accelerate, brake, steer - but at any point, you can hit a button to unfold wings and take off. That moment never gets old. One second you're swerving through traffic, the next you're hovering above the city, gliding past rooftops like your car forgot it wasn't a jet. Flying is floaty in the best way: it gives you room to pull stunts, change direction mid-air, or just soar for a while before crashing into something at full speed. There are races too, but half the fun is just messing around - trying to land on rooftops, threading between buildings, or seeing how far you can launch yourself from the top of a ramp. And if you bring a second player in? Chaos doubles. It's a perfect game for just fooling around with a friend, especially since there are tons of coins and power-ups scattered all over the map to chase after. What really works for Ultimate Flying Car 2 is that it never asks you to slow down. The game just keeps tossing you more toys - faster cars, crazier stunts, better physics - and says, "Go have fun." It's not trying to be polished or realistic, and that's why it works. The explosions are over the top, the cars defy gravity, and none of it really makes sense - but it doesn't need to. It's all about that feeling of launching off a ramp, hitting the wings just right, and watching your car drift through the air like it belongs up there. It's ridiculous, loud, and occasionally buggy - but that's part of the charm. If you're in the mood for something flashy, fast, and not at all concerned with the laws of physics, this is a great way to kill time (and possibly a few virtual lampposts).