India's Most Famous Landmarks Are Now in a Browser Racing Game

India's Most Famous Landmarks Are Now in a Browser Racing Game

Most racing games are set on generic European circuits, neon-lit American highways, or Japanese mountain passes. Sadak Fury is different.

As you race down the highway, you'll see the silhouette of the Taj Mahal rising from the fog on your left. A few kilometres later, the India Gate arch glows on the horizon. Then the Qutub Minar, then the Gateway of India, then Hawa Mahal's tiered pink facade. All rendered in 3D. All alongside a road that feels unmistakably, chaotically, beautifully Indian.

▶ Race Past India's Landmarks — Free on Chrome


The 5 Landmarks You'll Pass in Every Run

1. Taj Mahal — Agra

The most recognisable monument in India — the white marble mausoleum with its central dome, four minarets, and a reflective water channel — appears on the right side of the highway, glowing faintly in night mode with a soft warm light. It's far enough away to feel like a background landmark rather than a foreground obstacle, which makes it feel exactly like looking at the real Taj from the Agra highway.

2. India Gate — New Delhi

The 42-metre war memorial arch stands proud on the left side of the road. In the game, India Gate features the eternal flame inside the arch rendered as a point of warm light — a small but deliberate detail. When you race past it at night, the glow lights up the immediate road around it.

3. Qutub Minar — Delhi

The 73-metre tapering minaret with its five distinct balcony rings and the famous iron pillar standing nearby. In Sadak Fury it appears as a series of stacked cylindrical segments that thin toward the top — capturing the essential shape of the original even in the game's low-poly style.

4. Gateway of India — Mumbai

The basalt arch on Mumbai's waterfront — two flanking towers joined by a central archway and topped with a dome. In the game, the Gateway appears on the left side of the highway, typically during night mode where its stone structure catches the ambient city glow beautifully.

5. Hawa Mahal — Jaipur

The "Palace of Winds" with its five-storey honeycomb facade and 953 small windows. In Sadak Fury, Hawa Mahal is the most architecturally complex of the landmarks — rendered with five visible tiers, each with arched windows, and crowned with small decorative cones. The terracotta-pink colour in day mode is immediately recognisable to anyone who's visited Jaipur.

The Billboard Culture Gets It Right Too

Beyond the landmarks, Sadak Fury absolutely nails the Indian roadside billboard experience. There are 20 rotating Hinglish ads that appear alongside the highway, including:

  • "HORN OK PLEASE — DEKH KE CHALNA BRO"
  • "CHAI ZYADA TENSION KAM — SHARMA CHAIWALA"
  • "FREE WIFI AT NEXT DHABA — ROADSIDE CONNECT"
  • "BUY 1 GET 1 SAMOSA FREE — PAPPU FAST FOOD"
  • "SPEED THRILLS BUT KILLS — MINISTRY OF ROADS"
  • "JUGAAD IS OUR SUPERPOWER — DESI INNOVATIONS"
  • "GHAR KA KHANA MISS KAR RAHE HO? — MA KA DHABA"
  • "BHAI SLOW DOWN — MUMMY WAIT KAR RAHI HAI"
  • "USE DIPPER AT NIGHT — MINISTRY OF ROADS"
  • "NO OVERTAKING — HAAN WO BHI NAHI"

If you've driven on an Indian highway at night, these hit differently.

Day Mode vs Night Mode

Each run randomly starts in either day mode (bright blue sky, warm sunlight, buildings casting sharp shadows) or night mode (deep navy sky, building windows glowing amber, neon car headlights, billboard lights illuminated). Both modes are beautiful — but night mode is where the game truly comes alive. The landmarks glow softly in the distance, the coin particles sparkle against the dark background, and the "HORN OK PLEASE" billboard lit up in red neon is genuinely gorgeous.

Made for Indian Road Memories

Whether you grew up trying to cross a Mumbai street, survived a bus ride on the Delhi–Agra highway, or just experienced Indian traffic from the comfort of a Bollywood film — Sadak Fury gets the vibe exactly right. The autos, the trucks, the potholes, the chai stall on the roadside, the "BHAI SLOW DOWN — MUMMY WAIT KAR RAHI HAI" billboard — it's a love letter to the beautiful chaos of Indian roads.

And it runs in your Chrome browser for free.

🕌 Race Past India's Icons — Free on Chrome

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