
Keep Driving is a road trip game with boss fights against tractors, and we can't put it down
Manual CD players, hitchhikers, herds of sheep in the road – it's the most realistic driving sim ever Skip 8 photos in the image carousel and continue reading
While most driving games take the obvious route and simulate what it's like to control a vehicle, YCJY Games' Keep Driving instead simulates everything that happens outside of that. We won't bemoan the rigours of Le Mans Ultimate for a second, or the flashy licenses of The Crew Motorfest , but at the same time you've simply got to respect a game that lets you decide what to put in your glovebox.
Available on Steam now, the nuts and bolts of Keep Driving are bits of roguelikes, adventure games and RPGs. You're plunged into a wistful pixel art depiction of Noughties America, asked to pick a backstory for your young character, including what their summer job is and how well they get on with their parents, and let loose in a boxy saloon with no particular objective other than maybe – if you feel like it – making it over to a festival a few hundred miles away.
Advertisement - Page continues below
It does a great job of capturing the slightly terrifying freedom of being a young adult with a car and very little experience of looking after oneself. You could go anywhere. The backbreaking load of life's accumulating responsibilities has yet to find its way onto your shoulders. Time feels infinite, but there's also the lingering sense that it's precious, and that older people view you with envy. How should you spend it?
Thankfully Keep Driving doesn't require you to have the answers, or indeed any particular plan. Things have a way of happening to you once you hit the road, from hitchhikers who exchange their mix CDs and snacks for safe passage to boss fight events against herds of sheep and tractors. You might like
The precise mechanics of those confrontations are a bit fiddly. They involve matching icons on your dashboard to those on your skills, which hang down from your rear view mirror like air fresheners, and if that sounds a bit abstract, that's only because it absolutely is. Some of the inherent satisfaction of finally working your way past a wilfully slow-moving vehicle is lost in the fight system, but seeing these encounters depicted as boss battles in the first place is inspired stuff.
There are a variety of vehicles you can embark on Keep Driving's freeform adventure with, although all but one of them are locked the first time you play. Put the hours in, though, and you can start a new adventure with a lumbering pickup truck, the kind whose suspension forks take a full two seconds to bottom out, and an un-named and only slightly beaten up muscle car. It may not be the most dependable choice for a cross-country, heavy mileage road trip, but that's the nice thing about being a young kid on a summer adventure: you've got license to make those mistakes.
Advertisement - Page continues below
You've also got numerous ways out of a sticky situation like a breakdown. If you decided that some experience working as a mechanic was in your backstory, you can roll your sleeves up and fix it yourself. If you've got a good relationship with your parents, they'll come and pick you up. Or maybe your hitchhiker friend happens to know their way around an engine bay.
The game pays attention to all the decisions you make along the journey, even the ones you don't realise you're making, and then resurfacing them down the road in the next scenario. That makes every journey feel like it's been written by you, and it makes Keep Driving feel immersive and full of agency and anecdotes, in a way that's extremely rare in a driving game.
And if that doesn't sell you: you select songs by manually operating a CD player. We were handed a disc by a stranger in a camper van outside a petrol station, slid it into the player and let the early Noughties jangly emo music ring out. How's that for immersive?
Thank you for subscribing to our newsletter. Look out for your regular round-up of news, reviews and offers in your inbox.
Get all the latest news, reviews and exclusives, direct to your inbox.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Review Geek
16 minutes ago
- The Review Geek
SEC Football: Any Given Saturday Review – Grit, glory, and chaos
Season 1 Episode Guide Opening Kickoff QB1 Shock the World Turning Point Football Family Bragging Rights Just Win When it comes to college football, no conference stirs up more passion, loyalty, and heated debate than the SEC. Short for the Southeastern Conference, this American football league isn't just a collection of teams — it's a way of life. Across twelve Saturdays, twelve teams battle for a shot at the playoffs, while fiercely loyal, die-hard fans rally their teams on from the side-lines. The pageantry, rivalries, and local pride that elevate these games beyond the field are all shown in their epic glory across these 7 episodes, and Netflix certainly don't hold back. From Alabama's dynastic dominance to the fever-pitch intensity of Auburn vs. LSU, SEC football is nothing short of a religion in parts of the American South. Netflix has been leaning hard into sports content lately, and SEC Football: Any Given Saturday is the latest docuseries to throw its football-shaped hat into the arena, aiming to spotlight what makes this league so compelling. Across the series, Any Given Saturday tracks several teams throughout the 2024 season, documenting their highs and lows while weaving in some of the year's standout moments. If you've seen any of Netflix's other football docs, the format will feel familiar. You get a mix of player interviews, head coach commentary, family insight, and locker room access, allowing you to really get a feel for the culture and who the big players are at each team. This is undoubtedly a tried-and-tested structure, but one that works well here. The show also does a commendable job showcasing the history and stakes of each team, with unique rituals and local traditions set alongside the distinct mindsets and preparation styles each squad brings into game day. On the field, the action is just as captivating. Carefully edited footage and well-timed commentary bring iconic moments from the season back to life. 2024 had a treasure trove of unique moments, including a wild finish between Auburn and Texas A&M. We also get a shocker between Alabama and Vanderbilt, along with a deliciously chaotic final Saturday where some teams fight to salvage their season and others eye the playoffs. For the most part, the pacing is tight, and college football fans will be in their element here, especially reliving all the highs and lows each team faces. Motivational speeches and team talks help to add an extra emotional punch, and these are edited nicely to maximize the rising stakes in just the right way. Any Given Saturday isn't trying to reinvent the sports docuseries genre, and it may not dominate the field on Netflix — but it doesn't need to. This is a compelling, well-produced look at one of the most passionate leagues in American sports. It captures the intensity, heartbreak, and hope that fuels SEC football. And for fans, that'll be more than enough.


Daily Mail
18 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Hunter Biden dives into Jeffrey Epstein conspiracy and makes gutsy prediction about Trump's ability to survive scandal
Fresh off his viral hit interview with leftist podcaster Andrew Callaghan, Hunter Biden appeared on the show again to demonstrate his painting skills and discuss conspiracies surrounding Jeffrey Epstein. The eldest son of President Joe Biden spoke about the Epstein files as he painted in his art studio, even as his personal sales have plunged since his father left the presidency after a single term. 'The simplistic explanation is always true,' he said, referring to the Epstein case and whether or not Donald Trump was in the files. He noted that Trump and Epstein were 'very close friends for a very, very long period of time' so it would make sense that the president's name was in the files. Trump has maintained that he threw Epstein out of his Mar-a-lago club because he was hiring some of the young women employees from his club, though the Justice Department informed Trump his name appeared in the files as part of its, according to reports. Inclusion of one's name in the deceased socialite's files not suggest criminal conduct. During the podcast interview, Hunter Biden struggled to discuss the case, as he appeared convinced that feeding conspiracy theories was damaging to the country. 'The thing I'm loath to do is to feed into another go**amn conspiracy theory, it's just so destructive to the entire culture, the fabric,' he ranted. But he then did exactly that, pouring fuel on the fire in declaring that it was very unlikely that Epstein killed himself in prison. 'He was murdered right before it was all about to blow up,' he said. 'Clearly, who believes that he killed himself?' he added. 'Nobody.' He refused to speculate on who may have killed the billionaire convicted sex offender, but said it was entirely possible to murder someone in prison. 'You know what kills me about this more than anything is agreeing with Tucker Carlson,' he added. 'It kills me! I don't want to feed into this.' He marveled that Trump's appointees in the FBI, Kash Patel and Dan Bongino, fed conspiracies about Epstein for years but failed to deliver to the president's political base. He speculated that Trump's failure to release the files would hurt the president politically, but also said that he could survive the controversy. 'Who knows? They may drop this,' Biden said about Trump's supporters. 'He may have that firm of a hold, if this is truly a cult and I believe that it is. I think he'll make it through.' Biden also argued that Trump and his supporters focused intently on the Epstein story because it was part of a strategy regularly employed by the Nazis and Russian President Vladimir Putin to label their political opponents as pedophiles. 'It's literally straight out of Putin's book, which by the way is not even Putin's book, that was used by the Nazis, elimination rhetoric came from there,' he said. He stressed that neither he nor his father was ever invited to Epstein's island. 'Me and Joe Biden, never been to Epstein island,' he said.


Daily Mail
18 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Carrie Underwood is unrecognizable after returning to 'natural hair color' for the first time in 30 years
Carrie Underwood shocked fans with a striking change to her appearance as she showed off her dramatic hair transformation on Monday. After more than two decades in the spotlight rocking her trademark bright blonde locks, the country superstar, 42, revealed she returned to her roots. 'Well, the last time I saw my natural hair color, I was probably about 12 years old, but I thought it might be time to give it a second chance,' she captioned a glamorous salon photo shoot. In the images, uploaded to her Instagram, the eight-time Grammy winner smiled as she posed with her natural, brunette tresses. She credited Nashville-based colorist, Katelin Megert, who cut, colored and styled her hair, for the new look. The Before He Cheats hitmaker is now rocking a classy shade of 'bronde' with honey blonde highlights and subtle money pieces. Within minutes, her famous friends and fans flooded the comments with love as they shared their reactions. 'So pretty!!!!!' Candace Cameron Bure gushed, while Kristin Chenoweth chimed in with a simple but enthusiastic, 'Love it!' Others called the color 'stunning' and said they were obsessed with the change. The hair makeover comes after two decades of Underwood keeping things light. In a 2012 interview with Refinery29, the Oklahoma native admitted she had always been curious about darker shades, but was hesitant to make the leap. 'I'd love to do a little more with hair color. I've always been blonde! The problem is, I don't want to shock people — like if I dyed my hair brown, I don't want people to think I'm turning dark and serious,' she said at the time. 'I wish I had started changing my hair around in the beginning, then it wouldn't be such a big shock if I did something like that now.' Still, Underwood has never been afraid to experiment with her look in other ways. In 2016, she chopped her waist-length waves to a shoulder-length cut, calling it a practical 'mom move.' As she told Elle, 'It's easier to fix, which was the whole point. I could spend half an hour to blow it dry and have it be super long, or I could spend that time playing with my son, and I'd much rather do the latter.' She and husband Mike Fisher are parents to sons Isaiah, 9, and Jacob, 5. Underwood shot to stardom as the winner of the fourth season of American Idol in 2005. She released her debut album Some Hearts later that year, which included the hit tracks Before He Cheats and Inside Your Heaven. The star is now widely considered one of the biggest and most successful country artists of all time. In addition to all nine of her albums debuting in the top 10 on the all-genre Billboard 200 chart, she's sold over 85 million records globally. She's also won 16 ACM Awards (including three Entertainer of the Year wins), seven CMA Awards and eight Grammy Awards. In 2008, she was officially inducted into the Grand Ole Opry by Garth Brooks.