2 PlayerStunt3DCarRacingDrifting
GenreDriving
PlatformDesktop browser
DeveloperRHM Interactive
Released2023
PlayersMultiplayer
PriceFree to play
Rating4.4/5 from 37,933 ratings
UpdatedJuly 2026

Night City Racing is a free 3D driving game you can play right now in your browser, with nothing to install. You slide into a garage of sports cars, grind through 16 racing challenges that tighten as you progress, and duck out whenever you want to launch off ramps in an open-world free drive arena. The whole thing runs on WebGL, so the same game loads on a laptop, a desktop or a Chromebook.

It was built by RHM Interactive and arrived in January 2023 for both Android and the web. The appeal is the loop: finish a race, watch coins land in your account, spend them on a sharper car, then go back and shave another second off your time. Four AI cars line up against you in every event, and a friend can take one of those slots in split-screen two-player on the same keyboard. The neon city backdrop gets people to click. The upgrade treadmill is what keeps them staying.

  • Free 3D driving game in the browser, with an Android app for anyone who wants it on a phone.
  • Line up against four AI cars across 16 racing challenges that ramp up in difficulty.
  • Pull a friend in for split-screen two-player on a single keyboard.
  • Stack coins from races, side challenges and stunts, then pour them into new supercars and upgrades.
  • Arcade drift handling with a NOS boost keeps it readable for new drivers and rewarding for veterans.

What is Night City Racing?

Night City Racing is an arcade stunt and racing game in 3D. The spine of it is a 16-event career of races against four computer-controlled cars, set on tracks that move from tight city blocks out to a flat, fast airfield. Each finish drops coins into your account, and those coins feed a garage where you can buy whole new supercars or push the one you already own further.

Wrapped around that spine are five side challenges and a free drive arena. The challenges, which include outrunning an airplane and beating the clock on obstacle courses, exist to print money when the main races get too hard. Free drive removes every limit and lets you learn a car, chain stunts and bank a steady income at your own pace. The handling is arcade-flavored: the car grips when you ask, slides when you push it, and gets a sharp kick of speed from NOS. It is approachable enough that a first-timer can win a race inside ten minutes, and loose enough that there is always a cleaner line to chase.

How to play

  1. Open the game and pick a car from your starting garage.
  2. Launch the first race on the city streets and try to beat the four AI cars to the line.
  3. Bank the coins from your finishing position into your account.
  4. Visit the garage and either buy a faster car or upgrade the one you are driving.
  5. Move into the next challenge, which is harder and pays more.
  6. Drop into free drive or replay a side challenge when you need a cash injection or a breather.
  7. Switch to two-player and race a friend split screen whenever they pull up a chair.

Steering, drifting and NOS

Handling sits firmly on the arcade side. You hold a direction to steer, ease off and the car drifts through the long bends, and NOS gives you a flat speed spike on straights. There is no manual gearbox and no fuel to manage. If you flip the car or nose into a wall, a single key drops you back on your wheels, and another key flicks the camera between chase, hood and wider views so you can read the next corner the way you like.

The controls split into three layouts depending on whether you play alone or share the keyboard. Here is the full set.

ActionOne playerTwo player, side ATwo player, side B
MoveWASD or arrow keysArrow keysWASD
Fire NOSLeft or Right ShiftMLeft Shift
Reset car positionROR
Look behindTLT
Change camera viewCKC

Single-player controls

Solo play hands you the full keyboard. WASD or the arrow keys drive the car, either Shift fires NOS, R resets the position if you end up on your roof, T glances backwards, and C cycles the camera. Because nothing is split, this is the layout to learn the tracks in. Run a few races alone, settle on a camera angle that shows corners early, and work out where the AI is slow before you invite a friend in.

Split-screen controls for two players

Two-player mode divides the keyboard down the middle so nobody reaches across. Side A takes the arrow keys for movement, M for NOS, O to reset, L to look back and K for the camera. Side B takes WASD for movement, Left Shift for NOS, R to reset, T to look back and C for the camera. The screen splits down the middle and both of you race the same event at the same time. It is the mode people remember, partly because the loser can always blame the layout.

Races, challenges and free drive

From the main menu you can point the game at three loose buckets of content. The race career is the spine and the thing that gates your progress, but the side challenges and free drive are where the real money comes from when you stall out.

ModeWhat you actually doHow it pays
Race careerBeat four AI cars across 16 tracks that rise in difficultyCoins based on where you finish
Side challengesFive events such as racing an airplane or beating the clock on obstacle tracksA flat payout on success, repeatable any time
Free driveOpen arena full of ramps for stunt practice with no opponentsCoins from the stunts and top speeds you rack up

Racing the 16 challenges

The career runs to 16 racing challenges and they stack in difficulty as you clear them. The opening events live in the city and mostly ask you to out-drive the AI on layouts that forgive a few mistakes. As you push further, the game shifts you onto the airfield and into tighter, more technical circuits where one blown corner hands the lead to a computer car and there is no easy way back. You always face four opponents, so the field is small enough that a single clean final lap can flip the whole result.

Side challenges for quick cash

Five side challenges sit alongside the career and they are mostly there to fund your garage. One puts you against an airplane on a runway, others are pure time attacks to a finish line, and a few thread you through obstacle-laced tracks where the clock is the only opponent. They pay the moment you succeed and you can replay them indefinitely, which makes them the fastest honest route to an expensive car when the main races are asking more than your current build can give.

Open-world free drive

Free drive drops you into an open arena packed with ramps and stunt objects and takes the brakes off every limit. There are no opponents and no timer. You build speed, launch off ramps, chain drifts and watch the coin counter climb from the stunts you land and the top speeds you hold. It is the mode to choose when a race has you frustrated, or when you have just bought a new car and want to feel out how it turns and boosts before risking it in a real event.

Tracks from city streets to the airfield

The 16 races spread across two broad flavors of circuit, and the difference between them changes how you drive. City tracks are tight and technical, airfield tracks are open and fast, and the career moves you from one to the other as it tightens the screws.

City street circuits

The city events are the early game. They run through neon-lit blocks with sharp corners, short straights and walls that punish a drifted line gone wrong. The density means NOS is best saved for the brief open stretches, and most of your time is spent managing corners and not understeering into the barriers. These races teach the handling model, and they teach it fast.

Airfield and open layouts

Later races push out to the airfield, where the layout opens up and top speed starts to matter more than cornering. The straights are long enough that a tuned engine and a full NOS bar win races on their own, but the wide tarmac hides a few nasty turns that catch players who pin the throttle and look away. Free drive shares some of this open space, so a few laps of stunt practice double as track reconnaissance for the career.

Buying and upgrading your supercar

The garage is where every coin lands. The game is upfront about the fantasy: you are a reckless driver stacking gold to both grow your supercar collection and tune the cars you already own. Faster cars cost more up front, but a deeply upgraded mid-tier car can keep pace with a stock top-tier one, so there is a genuine choice between buying wide and going deep on a single favorite.

Where your coins goWhat it gets you
A brand new carA different supercar with its own speed, grip and boost feel
Upgrades to your current carRepeated smaller spends that sharpen the vehicle you already drive
Replaying challenges firstThe fastest repeatable income before a big purchase

Is Night City Racing free and unblocked?

Yes. Night City Racing is free to play in your browser on African Safari Games, with no download and no account. The web build is the full game, so you get the same cars, races, challenges and free drive arena as the Android version without installing a thing. It runs on Chromebook, Mac, Windows and Linux through any current browser, and it drops you straight into the menu.

There is no paywall tucked inside the browser version either. Coins come from playing, not from a card, so progress tracks cleanly to how much you actually race.

Tips to win more races

  • Save NOS for straights and the run out of slow corners, never for the corner itself.
  • Drift the long bends to carry speed through them rather than braking down to a crawl.
  • Hit the reset key the instant you flip or get stuck, it is faster than clawing back manually.
  • Cycle the camera with C until you find a view that shows the next corner early.
  • Grind the side challenges to fund a faster car before you push into the harder races.
  • Take a new car into free drive first so you know how it turns and boosts before you race it.
  • In split screen, settle on a camera view together so neither side reads the track blind.
  • Learn the airfield layout in free drive before you race on it, the open tarmac hides sharp turns.

What makes Night City Racing hold up

What keeps this one in people's rotation is the short distance between effort and reward. A race lasts two or three minutes, pays out the moment it ends, and that payout is sitting in the garage a second later. You are never more than a handful of events from a tangible upgrade, and that loop is hard to step away from.

The split-screen mode is the other half of it. Racing the AI is fine, but edging out someone sitting next to you on the same keyboard, ideally right after they reset their car into a barrier, is the moment people actually remember. The arcade handling keeps the floor low enough that anyone can be competitive inside a few races, and the ceiling high enough that there is always a cleaner line to find on the next lap.

Get Night City Racing on mobile

Night City Racing has an Android app on Google Play, so you can keep grinding challenges and upgrades on a phone.

Frequently asked questions

Is Night City Racing free?

Yes. It is free to play in your browser and on Android, with no download needed for the web version.

Can I play Night City Racing with a friend?

Yes. Pick two-player mode and you both race split screen on the same keyboard, with side A on the arrow keys and side B on WASD.

How many races are in Night City Racing?

There are 16 racing challenges that get harder as you clear them, plus five side challenges and an open free drive arena.

Who made Night City Racing?

It was developed by RHM Interactive and released in January 2023 for Android and the web.

Can I play Night City Racing unblocked at school?

Yes. Night City Racing is unblocked on African Safari Games and runs straight in your browser, with no download and nothing to install.

Does Night City Racing work on a Chromebook?

It does. The web build runs in any modern browser, so Chromebooks, Macs and Windows PCs can all play it without an install.

Night City Racing gameplay video

Night City Racing gameplay