Car Parking Multiplayer has quietly built one of the more dedicated mobile gaming communities out there. Developed by Olzhas, a Kazakhstan-based indie studio, the game sits in a surprisingly competitive niche: open-world parking and driving simulators on mobile. What started as a straightforward parking game has evolved into something closer to a social driving sandbox, complete with multiplayer lobbies, car customization, and user-generated content tools.
The official Telegram channel functions as the primary announcement hub for the game's development cycle. Posts arrive infrequently — roughly once every few weeks to once a month — but they carry weight when they do appear. The channel is essentially a changelog delivered directly to players, skipping app store update notes entirely. Announcements cover beta releases for Android, new car additions, reworked vehicles, seasonal updates, map expansions, and increasingly ambitious features like the CPM Editor, which allows players to create, host, and join custom environments. That last addition signals a meaningful shift in the game's direction, moving toward player-driven content in a way that most mobile games of this type never attempt.
The tone of posts is friendly and brief — no marketing fluff, no excessive hype. A typical announcement lists what's new in bullet points and signs off with something like "Enjoy!" It's refreshingly direct, though it also means the channel offers almost no behind-the-scenes insight, developer commentary, or community interaction. There are no polls, no Q&A threads, no engagement-bait posts. For a channel with over 641,000 subscribers, that feels like a missed opportunity.
The content skews almost entirely toward Android users, with beta builds dropping on Google Play first. iOS players receive updates later and get significantly fewer mentions in posts, which may frustrate a portion of the audience. The channel also lacks any visual consistency — some posts include screenshots or media, others are plain text. Given how visually driven gaming content tends to be, this is a notable gap.
That said, the channel does exactly what it promises: it keeps players informed about what's coming before it hits the stable release. For anyone actively playing Car Parking Multiplayer, subscribing here means you'll know about new cars, events like the Big Construction multiplayer mode, or map overhauls before most of the player base does. Beta testers in particular will find it indispensable.
If you're a casual fan or someone who plays the game only occasionally, the low posting frequency means this channel won't clutter your feed. But don't expect a community experience — this is a one-way broadcast, not a forum. For what it is, it works. For what it could be, there's plenty of room to grow.