
GAI Stops Auto: Right Version Simulator
A traffic cop fantasy that swaps spreadsheet micromanagement for bribe negotiations and meme-fueled absurdity - dirt cheap, knowingly ridiculous, and more playable than it has any right to be.
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About GAI Stops Auto: Right Version Simulator
My first impression was that this had no business being as committed to its own bit as it is. GAI Stops Auto is a third-person traffic police simulator from indie developer Axyos Games, and it leans so hard into internet meme culture and Eastern European absurdism that calling it a straightforward sim would be missing the entire point. You stand on a road, whistle in hand and traffic stick raised, pulling over cars and deciding in each driver dialog whether to write a proper fine or pocket a bribe. That moral fork in the road is the core loop, and it works because the consequences feel immediate rather than abstract. The decision-making layer is thin by grand-strategy standards, but it is not absent. Each traffic stop is essentially a short conversation tree: assess the violation, read the driver, pick your response. Do you play it straight for your boss or run a corruption racket until the police chief catches up with you? The dialog system keeps these moments punchy rather than drawn out, which suits the tone. What disrupts the routine - and this is where the game earns its meme-heavy tags - are the random events. Muscular "gachi boys" apparently threaten the planet on a cyclical basis, and stopping them falls to you, the underpaid traffic officer. It is completely unhinged, and the Steam community has responded accordingly, with around 85 percent positive ratings across nearly 300 reviews. For players who want strategic depth, be straight with yourself: this is closer to a short-session curiosity than a system-rich simulator. There is no meaningful economy to optimize, no shift roster to schedule, and the AI driving behavior is functional rather than sophisticated. The story mode gives the experience a beginning and an end, which is more structure than many games at this price tier manage, but do not expect a branching campaign with persistent consequences. What the game actually delivers is a series of comedic vignettes strung together by a simple traffic-stop mechanic, and that loop holds up for a few hours before the event pool starts to feel familiar. Who is it for? Casual players who want something offbeat and short, anyone with a fondness for the absurdist humor of post-Soviet internet culture, and bargain hunters who are happy to spend an evening with something that does not demand a tutorial or a FAQ. It is not a game that rewards theorycrafting, and there is no mod ecosystem to speak of. Approach it as a comedy short film you can interact with rather than a simulation you can master, and the price-to-entertainment ratio holds up well. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 7
- Memory
- 4 GB RAM
- Storage
- 4 GB available space
- Graphics
- GeForce GTX 460 or Radeon HD 5850
- Processor
- Intel Core i3 4170 or AMD FX-8120
Recommended
- OS
- Windows 7 and later
- Memory
- 8 GB RAM
- Storage
- 4 GB available space
- Graphics
- GeForce GTX 960 or Radeon HD 7950
- Processor
- Intel Core i5 8400 or AMD Ryzen 5 2600
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Reviews & Ratings
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Game Info
- Developer
- Axyos Games
- Publisher
- Axyos Games
- Release Date
- Jun 4, 2021


