Similiar games
Backseat Drivers throws two players into the middle of a chaotic, never-ending road trip inside a car that was never built to survive it. One player is the driver—unable to see a single thing outside the windshield. The other is the passenger—stuck in the back seat, unable to steer, screaming directions that may or may not arrive in time. Communication becomes the lifeline between progress and disaster, especially as the car continues to fall apart and the world outside grows increasingly uncooperative.
The vehicle isn’t just unreliable—it’s actively working against you. Parts shake, loosen, detach, or explode without warning. Fortunately, you’re free to modify the car with whatever bizarre tools you can find along the way. Want to replace a steering wheel with a fishing rod? Sure. Using an old cassette player instead of a brake pedal? Go ahead. Survival depends on creativity, adaptation, and the ability to stay calm when everything is clearly not okay.
The result is a loud, unpredictable ride where success is measured less by distance and more by how long you can keep functioning as a team.
Each level brings new hazards. Subways, icy mountain roads, bizarre laboratories, and government checkpoints all test your coordination. Sometimes the biggest challenge is just understanding what your partner means when they yell, “LEFT!” and mean “RIGHT!” The game exaggerates miscommunication into a mechanic—punishing poor teamwork and rewarding moments of near-telepathic precision. And when it goes wrong, it’s never quiet. You’ll laugh, panic, argue, and probably crash, but always come back for another run.
Backseat Drivers takes the classic idea of a road trip and turns it into a barely-controlled descent into absurdity. The more you play, the more parts of the car can be unlocked, upgraded, or swapped entirely—each one changing how you handle obstacles. What begins as a disaster machine can eventually become your perfect wreck. And whether you’re guiding grandma through a blizzard or launching off a cliff because someone misunderstood “slow down,” the game makes sure every ride tells a story. Just not always a successful one.