Here’s a write-up for MadOut Open City 2 based on its key features, gameplay, and overall reception.
Who Should Play It
Recommended for players who love vehicle-focused sandboxes, stunt-driven gameplay, and emergent chaos rather than polished narratives.
Not ideal for those seeking photorealism, tight simulation, or mission-driven story structure.
Gameplay: Where Aggression Meets Freedom
MadOut Open City 2 is best described as a hybrid of GTA's vehicular mayhem and FlatOut's aggressive, damage-centric racing. madout open city 2
Open-World Sandbox: The city is large, open, and fully explorable. From industrial zones and highways to downtown districts, there’s a surprising amount of verticality and hidden jumps. You can get out of your car and walk around, though the on-foot mechanics are basic.
Vehicular Combat is King: Driving feels heavy and weighty. Collisions are meaty, cars deform realistically (for a mobile game), and you can equip your vehicles with weapons like machine guns and rocket launchers. The AI is notoriously aggressive—rival drivers will actively try to pit you, block you, or blow you up.
Mission Variety: The game offers standard race types (circuit, drag, checkpoint), but the real fun lies in the "open" missions: taxi driving, gang eliminations, police chases, and "hold the zone" arena battles.
Police System: The wanted system is simple but relentless. The cops ram hard, set up roadblocks, and escalate quickly. Escaping requires finding a hideout or outrunning them in a high-speed chase.
Class D (Crapwagons): Old sedans, vans, and rusted compacts. Fun for slow-motion drifting.
Class C (Muscle): Heavy American-style coupes. Excellent for ramming police cruisers.
Class B (JDM): Nimble Japanese-style tuners. King of the touge (mountain passes).
Class A (Exotics): Italian-style speedsters. Fragile but blisteringly fast.
Special Vehicles: A tank, a monster truck, and a shopping cart with a rocket engine (easter egg).
The Community and Ongoing Support
Despite being a few years old, MadOut Open City 2 has a cult following. The developers, Gaming Factory, have been criticized for slow updates, but the Community Patch 2.4 (released last month) finally fixed the netcode for online drift competitions. Who Should Play It
Modding is alive and well on PC. You can find mods to import real car brands, visual enhancements (Reshade), and even total conversion mods that turn the game into a Twisted Metal style arena fighter.