Drive Asgore’s chaotic commute in Underwheels

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Underwheels: Asgore’s meme-packed morning drive

Crash headfirst into Underwheels chaos

Underwheels turns a throwaway Undertale meme into an over-the-top driving joke you can actually play. Instead of watching a short clip of Asgore behind the wheel, you grab control of the car yourself inside Underwheels and try to survive a side-scrolling commute that was clearly never meant to be safe. Curbs rise up at the worst moments, cardboard standees fill the road, and familiar silhouettes from the underground pop in just long enough to make you laugh before you slam straight into them. The result is a scrappy little browser game called Underwheels that uses simple controls and ridiculous obstacles to keep every run slightly different from the last.

Because Underwheels is small and instantly accessible, it fits perfectly into the gaps between classes, work sessions, or game nights. There is no save file to worry about and no complicated tuning menus to navigate. You spawn in, you hit the gas, you see how far Asgore’s long-suffering car can make it before physics, fandom references, or your own impatience send it flying into a wall. Underwheels runs rarely last more than a couple of minutes, which makes it easy to chase “just one more try” without realizing how much time you have spent trying to one-up your last distance in Underwheels.

Simple controls, loud reactions

Underwheels keeps input straightforward so the chaos on screen can do the heavy lifting. You tap to hop the wagon over potholes and curbs, feather the brakes to avoid plowing straight into a pile of boxes, and occasionally decide that smashing through a flimsy obstacle is funnier than dodging it. The car has a pleasingly floaty weight, wobbling just enough when it lands to make every jump feel a bit unsafe without ever tipping into total frustration. That exaggerated bounce also makes even small mistakes feel dramatic, which is exactly what a meme racer built around Asgore’s commute should deliver.

Because the control scheme is so minimal, Underwheels is easy to share with friends who do not normally play driving games. Anyone who can press a couple of keys or tap a screen can handle the basics, and the humor lands even if they only know Undertale from screenshots. The first few runs often end in ridiculous, barely controlled crashes, and those failures are as entertaining as any successful clear. Half the joy of Underwheels comes from watching the wagon fold under pressure while the background keeps throwing new jokes at you.

Undertale references stuffed into every mile

While you are swerving through traffic, Underwheels is busy winking at Undertale fans with background details and throwaway gags. Skeletons lurk on the sidewalks, pastries and donuts appear in unlikely places, and roadside billboards echo lines that long-time players will recognize instantly. None of the references are required to play; they sit in the background as a reward for paying attention, giving the commute a lived-in feeling that goes beyond a generic parody road.

Dialogue snippets pop up from time to time to comment on your driving, jab at Asgore’s situation, or nod to specific routes and endings from the original game. Underwheels never tries to retell Undertale’s story or overwrite what happened underground. Instead it treats the commute like an offbeat side episode, a slice of life where the king’s biggest problem is a road full of hazards and a player who cannot keep the car pointed straight ahead. That light touch keeps the tone playful and makes the game easy to recommend to both hardcore fans and people who just enjoy weird indie projects.

Short runs that invite experimentation

Each stage in Underwheels is designed to be cleared in a minute or two once you know what you are doing, but the first attempts are usually far messier. Because the levels are compact, you can afford to experiment with different lines, riskier jumps, or deliberately goofy choices just to see what happens. Maybe you try to clip every cardboard cutout you see, or attempt to drive perfectly safely for once and discover that the road layout is not interested in cooperating.

That constant cycle of crash, respawn, and retry is where Underwheels feels most at home. You start recognizing certain choke points and visual jokes, then learn tiny timing tricks that carry you an extra few meters further down the road. It is never about unlocking new gear or grinding a currency; the main upgrade is your own familiarity with the commute and your willingness to lean into its slapstick pacing. Underwheels rewards players who laugh off mistakes, hit restart, and keep pushing Asgore’s beleaguered car a little farther.

Perfect fodder for clips and memes

Because the action in Underwheels escalates quickly and catastrophically, it produces great moments for short clips. One unlucky bounce can send the wagon careening through props in a way that feels perfectly timed for sharing on social feeds or group chats. The combination of recognizable characters, absurd collisions, and punchy level length makes Underwheels an easy source of new memes built on top of the original meme that inspired it.

If you enjoy recording gameplay, you will find plenty of repeatable challenges inside Underwheels. Try no-brake runs, speed-focused attempts where you never slow down, or “honor the car” sessions where you play as safely and politely as possible. Each self-imposed rule interacts with the roads and props differently, giving you reasons to return even after you have technically seen every stage. The minimalist design lets Underwheels slip into the background of your creative projects while still delivering plenty of chaotic material when you need it.

Jump into the driver’s seat in seconds

One of the nicest things about Underwheels is how little friction stands between you and the action. There is no lengthy intro to skip, no giant download, and no account system asking you to sign up before you crash your first car. You open the page, the game loads in your browser, and Asgore’s wagon is ready to roll. That immediacy suits the tone perfectly: Underwheels is a joke you can tell in motion, not a story that demands hours of set-up.

Whether you are squeezing in a quick break during the day or settling in for a late-night meme marathon, Underwheels offers a fast, funny way to blow off steam. The commute is dangerous, the references come thick and fast, and the car always seems one bad landing away from total disaster. If you have ever chuckled at the idea of Asgore caught in traffic, this small but spirited browser racer gives you the keys and dares you to see how far the joke in Underwheels can go before everything falls apart.

Drive Asgore’s chaotic commute in Underwheels is ready to play

Race Underwheels through a wild meme-filled commute, steer Asgore’s car past slapstick hazards, chain jumps and brakes, and share quick chaotic runs.

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