Car Parking Multiplayer 2
olzhass
Screenshots



About this app
If you like cars and chaos, this one’s for you. Car Parking Multiplayer 2 mixes free-roam driving with straight-up parking puzzles, ugly wins and tiny triumphs. You can walk around, pop into gas stations, haggle with a mechanic (okay, not literally haggle—but there’s a mechanic bay), and hop into dozens of modes: taxi runs, drag sprints, police chases, drone scouting, and yes—parking challenges that will make you curse a little. Just park. Seriously. Controls feel familiar: steer, brake, clutch (yes, real clutch—the devs gave you manual transmission and I appreciate the pain), adjust suspension, tune gears, and tweak liveries until your car looks like it eats curbs for breakfast. There are roughly 160 cars modeled with interiors (some are shockingly detailed). Buildings open up; some interiors are usable. Fuel matters. Tunings matter. Dyno runs exist (bring patience). You can swap cars with real people, add friends, and hop into voice chat—so expect both genuine help and utter nonsense from strangers. "Hey—show me your engine," someone once yelled in a lobby. I showed them mine (metaphorically). They laughed. I laughed back. We raced. We lost. We fixed things. This is not a pristine simulator for purists. Expect glitches, occasional lag in crowded servers, and the odd physics quirk (cars do weird things on steep ramps). But if your main thing is tinkering, trolling, or testing your curb-hugging skills, this app fits. Target audience: players who love car customization, casual racers, and people who appreciate a social playground with mechanical toys. If you want a strict, polished racing sim—maybe look elsewhere. If you want late-night car bickering and clutch burns—welcome.
Editor's Review
I loaded Car Parking Multiplayer 2 at 2 a.m. because, naturally, that’s when the best chaos happens. The server had real players—nosy, helpful, and sometimes straight-up rude. I spent two hours trying to line up a drift in a lifted sedan (my hands sweaty on the controller). I even got stuck on the third parking challenge for a solid 90 minutes—yes, embarrassed, yes, proud when I finally nailed it. The game shines when players show up. Trade a beat-up coupe for a nice two-tone, form a convoy, fight a cop in police mode, or do a dingy taxi shift while someone yells directions in voice chat. The clutch and manual option is not a gimmick. It adds weight. It also adds frustration—because you will stall, often, and you will laugh about it later (or not). "You got torque?" someone asked me mid-race. "Barely. It’s smoke and dreams," I admitted. Criticisms? Sure. The netcode can hiccup when the city fills up. Some interiors feel empty, and the UI buries obvious options behind one too many taps. Updates help, but don’t expect perfection. Still—this isn’t a sterile arcade. It’s loud, human, and oddly affectionate toward car nerds. I keep coming back. The customization hooks me; the social moments keep me. Also—there are mods and liveries that look better than my real-life paint job (and that stings).
Pros
- Huge roster of cars with real interior details—160 models to mess with
- Multiple modes (police, taxi, drag, drone) that change pacing fast
- Deep tuning options: clutch, suspension, dyno runs and gear tweaks
- Swap cars and join friends easily—voice chat is built in for live trash talk
Cons
- Server lag in crowded areas can ruin a perfect drift
- Some building interiors feel underused or empty
- UI hides advanced settings behind multiple menus
- Occasional physics oddities (your car might do things that make no sense)
Additional Information
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