APP COMRADE

Samsung Galaxy / Games > Role Playing / POLICE CAR PARKING GAME: CAR GAMES

REVIEW

Police Car Parking Game is keyword soup with a steering wheel attached.

FINGERNIC's parking sim arrives on Samsung Galaxy Store as a category-template entry that runs but never gives a reason to keep running it.

BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 9, 2026 · 2 MIN READ

Samsung Galaxy

Police Car Parking Game: Car Games

FINGERNIC

OUR SCORE

4.0

SAMSUNG GALAXY

★ 5.0

PRICE

Free

The driving-sim shelf on every mobile storefront is a category that exists mostly because someone keeps building these games and someone else keeps installing them. Police Car Parking Game is a baseline entry — a parking template with a police-car skin pasted over it, the mission chain extended just far enough to support a session, and the production quality calibrated to “ships and runs.” There’s nothing wrong with the math; there’s also nothing in the game that justifies pulling it off the shelf over its many competitors.

The category mismatch on the Galaxy Store listing is the most interesting thing about it. “Games > Role Playing” is wrong in any meaningful sense — there is no roleplaying, no character progression, no narrative beyond the bare framing — but the categorisation is consistent with a search-traffic strategy that several FINGERNIC titles share. The honest read is that the game exists more to be installed than to be played.

Galaxy Store browsers looking for a police-themed driving game have better options. Players looking for a competent parking sim have better options. Players looking for a genuinely entertaining low-commitment session have many better options. The verdict here is to skip and route attention toward titles where the production budget reaches the gameplay, not just the keywords in the title.

The title contains three categories. The game contains one mechanic, executed without enthusiasm and without polish.

FEATURES

Police Car Parking Game: Car Games is a vehicle-parking sim from FINGERNIC, listed on the Samsung Galaxy Store under the "Games > Role Playing" category — a categorisation that doesn't really match the gameplay, which is straightforward arcade parking with a police-car skin. The genre belongs to the sprawling "low-budget driving sim" shelf that every Android-adjacent storefront accumulates.

Structure is genre-template. A series of parking levels presents the player with a marked target spot, a constrained route through cones and other parked vehicles, and a time or accuracy threshold to clear the level. The "police" framing layers light pursuit and traffic-stop missions on top of the parking core, but the underlying interaction is the same — steer, brake, align with the marker.

Free with no listed in-app purchases on the Galaxy Store. Like other titles in this category, monetization in practice typically arrives through interstitial advertising between levels.

MISSION ACCOMPLISHED

The game installs and runs. The basic parking loop functions: the markers render, the wheels turn, the success and fail states fire reliably. On a 2023-era Galaxy phone the framerate is stable. Players who specifically want a no-commitment driving sim with a police-car aesthetic can complete a few levels without crashing the app.

That is the defensible argument.

ROOM TO IMPROVE

The category template is the entire game. The driving model is floaty in the way these games invariably are — the cars feel like they're hovering rather than rolling — and the parking constraints don't escalate in a meaningful way past the first dozen levels. The "police" missions are thin: a chase sequence with rubber-banding suspect cars, a traffic-stop animation, and back to the parking grid.

The category mismatch on the store ("Role Playing") is a small tell. There's no role-playing here in any sense; the categorisation appears to be either a metadata error or a search-traffic optimisation. App store reviews across the FINGERNIC catalogue describe the same pattern as other low-budget driving sims: short novelty, ad-density complaints, and disengagement within a session.

No persistent progression to speak of, no garage of unlockable cars worth chasing, no soundtrack that survives more than ten minutes of play.

CONCLUSION

Skip Police Car Parking Game. Galaxy Store users who want a parking sim have better-funded alternatives — the various Real Car Parking and Dr. Parking entries are dramatically more polished — and players who want a police-themed driving game have better choices in the chase-sim category. There's no constituency this title serves competitively.