Traffic Cop 3D: Car Chase
Kwalee Ltd
Screenshots



About this app
You roll up to the intersection. Headlights cut through fog. A sedan blows a red and—there it is—the little plate icon flashes. That's the hook. Traffic Cop 3D: Car Chase drops you into the kind of street duty that smells like burnt rubber and instant regret (in a good way). You drive, you scan, you decide: radio them in or light 'em up with siren and go. Simple verbs. Big feelings. Controls are straightforward: steer, throttle, brake, siren, and that plate-scan mechanic that tries to make you feel like a detective instead of a taxi driver. Some chases turn into cat-and-mouse races across highways; others are tight urban squeezes where one wrong turn costs you the perp. The game pairs short patrol runs with bursty action—quick incidents that can explode into multi-minute pursuits. There’s a progression loop: earn cash, unlock new vehicles (some handle like angry shopping carts, others slide like butter), and optionally subscribe for extras. "Do you have backup?" I asked. "Negative—I'm it," I muttered to my dashboard (yes, I talk to my dashboard). Pause. The subscription tier gives you a helicopter mini-game, a canine companion, doubled earnings, and removes non-optional ads. That’s tempting—especially when you hit a streak of impossible respawns or when the same getaway car jukes you three times in a row. But don’t expect the VIP pass to hand you perfect gameplay; it’s a convenience and a little toy chest, not a miracle cure. This isn’t a simulator for people who want a mil-spec experience. Don’t expect full-on realism like wheel-to-wheel curriculum; instead expect arcade-leaning physics, loud sirens, and satisfying pullover moments. There are textures that look crisp and others that look meh. Ads are frequent unless you subscribe. In short: it’s fun, it’s loud, and it’ll make you yell at your phone. Target audience? Folks who like quick action loops, players who enjoy tension in five-minute bursts, and people who secretly love pressing a siren button until their neighbors text them. If you want nuanced patrol tactics or meticulous tuning—this might frustrate you. If you want to feel like the last line on a chaotic night shift—you'll grin, curse, and come back for another run.
Editor's Review
I spent a few late nights with Traffic Cop 3D, and I’ll be blunt—I had a blast, and I also threw my phone once (it survived). The game hits a sweet spot between arcade thrills and light sim mechanics: scanning plates feels satisfying, hits of success (a clean pull-over) land like candy, and the police siren? Cheesy but glorious. I love the little moments—catching a speeder just as they clip a median, that split-second when you decide to ram or box them in. I got stuck once on a highway escape that lasted nearly two hours of retrying (yes, two hours). Frustrating. Also hilarious in retrospect. Dialogue snippet: "Pull over now!" — "Not happening." (Classic.) The UI is mostly clear, though menus can be cluttered by ads and upsell prompts. Subscriptions do add real content: the helicopter mini-game is a fun palate cleanser, and the dog adds personality. But let’s not pretend subscription equals better driving skills—it's perks, not a patch. My mild gripe: collision and handling feel inconsistent—sometimes you’re precise; other times a mailbox ends the chase and you’re left squinting. That said, the core loop keeps pulling me back. If you want quick, tuneful, slightly messy car chases with personality, this is worth a download. If you demand ultra-real tactics or hate microtransactions—maybe sit this one out.
Pros
- Plate-scan mechanic adds a detective layer to moments of pure driving
- Short patrol runs that turn into unexpectedly long, tense chases
- VIP unlocks (helicopter mini-game and canine companion) that add variety
- Siren and vehicle audio deliver satisfying, punchy feedback
Cons
- Frequent non-optional ads unless you subscribe
- Handling can feel inconsistent between vehicles
- Subscription prices feel steep for weekly option
- Some textures and environments look dated
Additional Information
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