Police Simulator Patrol Officers Apunkagames [ Hot • RELEASE ]
Stay safe out there, officers. And remember: Always verify your download sources... and your suspect's ID.
Let’s be honest: The gaming world has two very distinct sides. On one side, you have the polished, triple-A storefronts like Steam and Epic Games, where a $40 price tag is considered "indie friendly." On the other side, you have the wild, nostalgic, slightly grey-area archives of the web—places like Apunkagames.
If you are patient and don't mind troubleshooting, it works. But if you hate fiddling with compatibility settings, pay the $30. Gameplay Review: Ticket Writing Simulator 2024 Once I actually got the game running, I was surprised. This isn't shovelware. The Mundane is Magnificent I spent my first 45 minutes standing on a sidewalk. I watched a car roll through a stop sign. I pulled him over. I asked for his license and registration (yes, you have to physically click the ID and hold it up to the light). He didn't have his registration on him. I had to radio dispatch, confirm his identity, and issue a citation.
Here is my full, uncensored, body-cam review of Police Simulator: Patrol Officers via the Apunkagames route. For the uninitiated, Police Simulator: Patrol Officers (developed by Aesir Interactive) is the closest thing we have to a true American-style policing sim. Forget the arcadey, explosive nature of Battlefield Hardline . This game is about turn signals. police simulator patrol officers apunkagames
Getting the game from Apunkagames was terrifyingly easy. The download speed was decent (use a download manager!), and the repack came pre-loaded with the "Police Vehicle Expansion" and the "Plain Clothes" DLC. For a game that costs roughly $30 on Steam, getting the complete edition for zero dollars is tempting.
The core gameplay revolves around you, a rookie officer in a fictional US city (Brighton), working your way up from issuing parking tickets to handling armed robbery callouts. The game features a dynamic neighborhood system, a variety of patrol vehicles, and a surprisingly deep "duty checklist" (checking IDs, searching for contraband, calling in felonies). For those who don't know, Apunkagames is a long-standing site known for compressing and repacking PC games, usually with all DLC included and—let’s not dance around it—DRM-free via cracks.
Recently, I decided to walk the line between both. I downloaded Police Simulator: Patrol Officers from the legendary repository Apunkagames. Why? Not just because I’m cheap (though, guilty), but because I wanted to see if the "freeware" version of this popular sim could still deliver the tension of a high-speed chase and the boredom of writing digital traffic tickets. Stay safe out there, officers
If you are reading this and you love sims, buy the game on a Steam sale for $15. But if you are just curious and want to write a digital ticket or two without opening your wallet? Apunkagames has your back—just keep your real antivirus on standby.
Antivirus apocalypse. My Windows Defender screamed like a siren. Now, 99% of the time with cracked games, this is a false positive due to the crack .dll files. But Police Simulator requires an online connection for the "Shift Record" (saving progress). The Apunkagames version supposedly includes an offline emulator, but I had three hard crashes during my second shift.
Yes. Turn signals.
One time, I ran a plate on a red sedan. It came back stolen. I initiated a felony stop. I screamed "SHOW ME YOUR HANDS" via my microphone (yes, voice recognition works in the crack!). The guy ran. We chased. He crashed. I tased him.
3.5/5 (Docked points for crashes, plus points for surprisingly deep mechanics).