Arrows / WASD = drive ----- Space = handbrake ------ R = repair ------ T = slow down time ------ I = inventory
Scrap Metal 3 is basically what happens when you take a bunch of cars, drop them in the middle of a giant empty zone, and say, “Have fun wrecking everything.” There’s no race, no timer, no competition—just you, a bunch of ridiculous vehicles, and enough space to go completely unhinged. Want to launch a Bugatti off a skyscraper-sized ramp? Cool, do it. Wanna see if a monster truck can bounce off five shipping containers and still drive? That’s the kind of chaos Scrap Metal 3 was made for. The map is huge and wide open, so you’ve got all the freedom in the world to just mess around. You get a whole menu of props too—barriers, loops, ramps, whatever. Stack them, smash through them, fly over them—there are no limits. The vehicles are actually detailed, too. It’s not just about making things explode (even though that’s definitely a highlight). Each car feels different when you drive it. Sports cars drift smooth, muscle cars have that bulky bounce, and trucks feel like absolute tanks. You can tweak stuff like suspension or wheels, or even change the paint if you're feeling picky. Then smash it into a wall and do it all over again. Scrap Metal 3 leans hard into the physics. Every crash feels brutal in the best way—like, you’ll slam into a wall and your car will just fold like paper. Parts fly off, frames twist, and it honestly looks kind of awesome. And the best part is that nothing tells you to stop. You can reset your car with a click and go straight into the next ridiculous stunt. It’s also fun just experimenting. You might build some sketchy loop-de-loop and try to fly through it in reverse. Or line up a line of cars like dominoes and plow through them with a semi-truck. This game rewards creativity and pure chaos. There’s no “wrong” way to play because the whole point is to see how wild things can get. Scrap Metal 3 is like a virtual sandbox for car lovers and destruction junkies. It doesn’t care about rules or realism—it just hands you a bunch of cars and says, “Break stuff.” Whether you’re into building ramps, flipping sports cars, or just launching everything into orbit for no reason, this game’s got the space and tools to make it happen.