HYPERDRIFT is an endless synthwave racer that never stops accelerating. Thread neon rings, gamble everything on turbo, and chase 270 MPH across an infinite electric sunset — until the grid takes you.
Two keys to steer. One to gamble. Everything else is nerve. Here's what's waiting on the grid.
Most runners ramp up, then flatten out. HYPERDRIFT keeps accelerating forever — and every 18 seconds the grid invents a new way to end your run. Walls become S-turn double walls. Pylons learn to hunt. Then the sweepers come.
Hold turbo and the world goes gold: ×2 score at ×1.45 speed. The meter burns dry in three seconds, and the walls arrive 45% faster while it does. Every burn is a bet that your reflexes cash the check.
The grid rewards the brave line, not the safe one. Thread rings to stack a streak multiplier up to ×8. Shave past a pylon with paint to spare and the near-miss bonus is yours. Every eighth ring in a streak restores a shield.
There are no audio files in HYPERDRIFT. The night-cruise score — pumping bass, half-time drums, wide analog pads — is synthesized live, note by note, while you play. And it's listening: as your speed climbs, the tempo climbs with it.
Every wipeout is archived. Climb the global ladder against drivers worldwide — and keep your own top five on this device. There is exactly one way up: drive better.
Your first run takes thirty seconds. Your hundredth will too. That's the problem.