Game Info
Updated: N/A
Category: Shooting
Score: 7.1
1 Player 3D Action Arcade Car crash Defense First Person Shooter gta Helicopter Hypercasual Kill

How to Play

The task of each level is to break away from the pursuit or rather to destroy all the pursuers Control Shoot left mouse button Aim control by moving the mouse Switch weapons 1 2 3 4 Reload - R Push the screen to shoot and fire on mobile devices

Description

Sometimes you end up behind the wheel of the most unreliable old car, being tailed by what feels like an army. That's how Grandfather Road Chase throws you in—not with speed, but with whatever you can cobble together as firepower. The setup’s simple: you're outgunned on the road and very much outnumbered. But there’s fun in that. To be honest, it gets weirdly satisfying when you line up a shot that takes a tire clean off or cause a drone to spiral out midair. Your arsenal is almost comical—AK47s one minute, then flamethrowers and crossbows the next? Each weapon has this clunky-yet-unique feel, so you kind of end up switching just for novelty as much as strategy. I noticed combos do more than rack up points; they sort of make chaos into its own rhythm. Waves of enemies come—motorcycles zipping up your tail, choppers overhead, even buggies ramming from the side—but there isn’t really any downtime. If you want calm gameplay, this isn’t your pick. There’s something oddly retro about how frantic it feels too. It doesn’t ask for deep planning—just reflexes and maybe some stubbornness to keep going after another messy escape attempt. Well, sometimes frustration kicks in when your beat-up car just won’t budge fast enough (that part really matters). Still, if fast-paced shooting with lots of on-the-fly swapping is your thing—it’ll click.

Editor's View

At first I thought I’d just breeze through this one—I mean, how tough can an endless road chase get? Turns out, pretty rough when your car barely keeps together and everything else is armed to the teeth. Honestly though, swapping between weapons kept things lively; blasting apart tires or landing headshots from a rickety car seat has this silly action-movie appeal. The controls felt responsive for the most part but got hectic fast once drones and helicopters joined in… Sometimes it felt like luck more than skill got me through certain sections. Well, I do wish unlocking new weapons was a little quicker; it drags if you're not acing every wave. It’s chaotic but entertaining—definitely not strategic or subtle—but some sessions are surprisingly addictive when you get into a groove.