Police Simulator: Patrol Officers: Highway Patrol Expansion
Highway Patrol straps a pursuit-focused expansion onto Police Simulator: Patrol Officers, adding freeway beats, PIT maneuvers, and high-speed chases. Whether the new terrain fixes the base game's rough edges is another matter.
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About Police Simulator: Patrol Officers: Highway Patrol Expansion
Police Simulator: Patrol Officers has always leaned into procedural shift work over action-movie spectacle, so Highway Patrol is a deliberate pivot. The expansion opens up freeway patrol zones, introduces high-speed pursuits as a core mechanic, and lets you execute PIT maneuvers to tactically disable fleeing vehicles. On paper, that reads like a meaningful systems addition. In practice, the depth of those systems is the central question mark hanging over the whole package. The PIT maneuver mechanic is the headline feature, and it works well enough to be satisfying in short bursts. Matching speed with a fleeing suspect, timing the nudge, watching the car spin out, it scratches an itch the base game never had. Highway patrol duties also shift the pacing considerably. Instead of foot patrols and parking tickets in a mid-sized city grid, you're covering longer stretches of road, calling in traffic stops, and managing pursuit escalation. If you found the original's urban beat too slow, the highway context genuinely changes the moment-to-moment rhythm. That said, the Mixed review score at launch is not a fluke. The AI driving behavior during pursuits is inconsistent in ways that matter. Fleeing suspects occasionally make decisions that read more like pathfinding errors than reactive driving, which undercuts the tension of a chase that should feel dangerous. The expansion also doesn't substantially overhaul the underlying simulation systems. Veteran players hoping for new officer progression mechanics, additional legal statutes to enforce on the highway, or reworked radio dispatch logic will find the additions thinner than the feature list implies. What you get is essentially a new map zone with one standout interaction type grafted on top. From a decision-making and systems standpoint, which is where I spend most of my mental energy evaluating a sim, Highway Patrol doesn't add the strategic layer some will hope for. There's no real resource management around patrol coverage, no meaningful traffic pattern simulation that rewards learning the highway as a system. You respond to what the game spawns, and the spawning logic doesn't feel smart enough to make the highway feel alive across a full session. For players who want a pure sandbox to replay specific chase scenarios, it holds up. For players who want their patrol shifts to feel emergent and consequential, the shallowness surfaces quickly. Who is this actually for? If you are already invested in the base game and want more variety in your patrol routes, the expansion delivers that variety at a surface level. New environment, faster cars, one genuinely fun new tool. If you are evaluating the full Police Simulator package as a newcomer, starting with the base game and treating this as optional is the sensible approach. The 45 percent positive score tells you something real: players expected more systemic substance and got mostly a reskin of the patrol loop with a speedometer. Diego, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- Aesir Interactive
- Publisher
- astragon Entertainment
- Release Date
- Jun 17, 2024