LG / game / CARS MASTER
REVIEW
Cars Master is filler for the LG webOS games rail.
Inlogic's casual TV-port driving game runs on the Magic Remote, lasts about ten minutes, and asks nothing of you.
BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 10, 2026 · 2 MIN READ
Cars Master
INLOGIC SOFTWARE S.R.O.
OUR SCORE
4.8
LG
★ 5.0
PRICE
Free
Cars Master is what the LG games shelf looks like when nobody is watching. Inlogic Software, a Slovak studio that has been porting casual mobile titles across every secondary store since 2005, ships dozens of these — solitaire variants, match-three boards, light driving games — and a fair number of them end up on LG webOS as free downloads with no listing description and no public release notes.
The webOS version controls with the Magic Remote’s pointer, accepts the directional pad as a fallback, and asks nothing of the player beyond ten minutes of attention. There are no in-app purchases visible at install, no account gate, no online component. For a parent handing the TV remote to a small child the absence of friction is the feature.
What it isn’t is a driving game worth seeking out. The model is rudimentary, the visuals are mobile-port flat, and there is no progression the player will remember the next morning. Free is the correct price; ten minutes is the correct dose; “fine, I guess” is the correct response.
Cars Master is what the LG games shelf looks like when nobody's watching — competent, free, and entirely without ambition.
FEATURES
Cars Master is a casual driving title from Inlogic Software, a Slovak studio that ports its mobile and HTML5 catalogue across LG webOS, Samsung Tizen, and the lower tiers of Google Play. On webOS it controls with the Magic Remote — point, click, hold-to-accelerate — with a fallback to the directional pad for owners of older LG remotes.
The game ships as a free download with no in-app purchases visible at install time, no account requirement, and no online component. There is no developer-published description on the LG store listing and no public release notes, which is itself a tell about the level of post-launch attention the title gets.
Asset weight is light, load times are quick on 2022-and-newer LG OLEDs, and the whole thing sits inside the LG Gaming portal alongside a few hundred other casual ports of similar provenance.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED
It runs. On a category shelf where a non-trivial share of the inventory either fails to launch on current webOS builds or hangs on the splash screen, "loads cleanly with the Magic Remote" is a real if low bar to clear.
Free with no ad walls and no account gate is the right call for the audience — a parent handing the TV remote to a child for ten minutes does not want a sign-in flow.
ROOM TO IMPROVE
Everything else. The driving model is rudimentary, the visuals are mobile-port flat, audio is minimal, and there is no progression worth the name. Magic Remote pointing works but does not transform the experience the way it does on, say, a Twitch tile-grid or a YouTube search field — for a driving game the directional input is what matters, and a TV remote is the wrong tool.
No leaderboards, no profiles, no second-controller support. The lack of any developer-side description on the LG store suggests Inlogic is not investing in the listing, which usually correlates with a lack of investment in the game itself.
CONCLUSION
Install if you have a young child and an LG TV and want a free, harmless, ten-minute distraction with no sign-in. For anyone else there is no reason to bother — the LG games shelf has better casual options, and a phone or tablet has better driving games at every price point including free. Inlogic ships dozens of these; this is one of them.