Google owns Waze. Recently, Waze introduced a very game-like social driving experience (avatars, moods, road candy). More importantly, Waze’s driver-reported data (police, potholes, objects on road) is being fed into Google Maps’ backend. A true simulator would need to train on these "obstacle events." The "new" innovation is the merging of Waze’s dynamic hazards with Google’s static 3D geometry.

The 3D Driving Simulator in Google Maps is not a gimmick. It represents a fundamental shift from navigation to pre-visualization. By combining real-world imagery, AI traffic, and game-like controls, Google Maps has become a rehearsal tool for drivers. Whether you're nervous about a busy freeway interchange or just want to check if a gas station is on the left or right side of the road, this feature turns route planning into a dry run.

Try it today: Open Google Maps → get directions → tap the "3D Sim" button → start driving before you start your engine.

In 2022, Google unveiled Immersive View at its I/O developer conference. Initially available for select landmarks (and later for entire neighborhoods in cities like Los Angeles, London, New York, San Francisco, and Tokyo), this feature is the skeleton of a driving simulator.

How it works: Using Neural Radiance Fields (NeRF) and AI, Google stitches together billions of Street View stills and aerial shots to create a 4D model of the world. You don’t just see a map; you float through a photorealistic, time-of-day aware digital twin of the city.

Why this matters for a simulator:

Verdict: If you squint, Immersive View is a passive driving simulator. The only thing missing is the user interface (accelerator, brake, steering wheel) and the physical dynamics (collision, weight transfer, speed).

Tech Details

Features
  • Compatible with all iOS devices.

  • Universal App.

System Requirements
  • iOS 3.1.3+

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