Press the left mouse button to speed up the cars.
Traffic Control is all about stopping crashes before they happen—except everything's moving way too fast and nobody wants to wait. Cars, motorcycles, and random trucks just barrel in like they’ve got somewhere important to be, and your job is to hit stop and go on the right ones before it all turns into a giant mess. Timing’s everything. You tap on the vehicles to make them pause and let others pass, but it gets stressful fast. If you leave something stopped too long, other cars start piling up behind it, and if you get too confident and let everyone move, you’ll probably cause a crash right in the middle of the intersection. One bad move, and it's chaos. Sirens, smoke, and cars flipping like pancakes. Traffic Control might seem easy at first—just click when you want a car to move or stop, right? But then the game starts tossing curveballs: faster cars that don’t care about anything, giant buses that move like turtles, and sometimes even a motorbike that flies in like it’s racing against time. It only takes one distracted second to mess up the entire flow. The screen gets hectic with more cars showing up from every direction. You try to create a rhythm, letting one lane go, stopping another, back and forth like you’re conducting some traffic orchestra. But one moment of panic and boom—instant disaster. No reset, no rewind. You’ve got to restart and try to do better next time. What makes it addictive? It’s the constant challenge. You tell yourself you’ll stop after this round, but then you mess up at 35 seconds and think “I can definitely beat that.” Next thing you know, it’s been 20 minutes. There’s something super satisfying about when everything goes smooth and you're running the intersection like a pro. You see the cars glide past each other perfectly and feel like you’ve unlocked some secret power. Traffic Control is one of those unbanned games you end up playing during boring classes or lunch breaks because it loads quick and doesn't need instructions. Anyone can start it in seconds, but only the brave (or super patient) can last long without a wreck. Great for reflexes, fun to watch explode, and always harder than it looks.