[LEGO BATMAN] Driving Empire 🏎️ Car Racing: Roblox Parent Guide

Open-world car sim where your kid races licensed supercars, customizes rides, and now robs LEGO Gotham ATMs in the latest Batman heist mode.

Car culture meets loot boxes

Your kid drives **300+ licensed cars** (Lamborghini, McLaren, Porsche) around an open-world city, customizes paint and performance, and meets other players at **car meets**. The May 2026 update added **The Dark Knight Pursuit**, a cops-and-robbers heist mode where kids either guard or loot **LEGO Gotham ATMs** for **Studs** currency. The core loop is free, but limited-edition vehicles live behind **premium crates** (R$649) with very low drop rates.

Why kids play [LEGO BATMAN] Driving Empire 🏎️ Car Racing

Licensed supercar fantasy

Kids drive real brands they see on YouTube and in garage posters. **Lamborghini, McLaren, Porsche, and Audi** badges make every car feel collectible. The **Batmobile** and nine other LEGO Batman rides landed in May 2026, so every Comic-Con kid wants one.

Car meets and roleplay

The game hosts **community car meets** where kids park custom builds, turn on underglow, and critique each other's paint jobs. Your kid joins external Discord servers (267k+ members) to plan meets and share screenshots. It is car culture, Roblox edition.

Heist mode with teams

**The Dark Knight Pursuit** splits servers into **Security** (catch robbers) and **Henchmen** (loot ATMs). Kids earn **Studs** by driving getaway routes or blocking criminals. Every round feels like a Fast & Furious scene they scripted.

Deep customization loop

Your kid tweaks **paint, rims, spoilers, underglow, and engine tuning** on every car. The garage is a sandbox. Kids spend hours perfecting a look, then race it or show it at meets for clout.

What parents should watch for

Premium crate gambling pressure

February 2023's **R$649 premium crate** locked all 13 new cars behind **very low drop rates**, and the community protested hard enough that the developer muted Discord critics. Your kid will see limited-edition vehicles rotate in and out of these crates, and the fear of missing a Batmobile or rare McLaren can drive real spending. The game is free to race, but **collector FOMO is the business model**.

Heist mode roleplay bleed

In **The Dark Knight Pursuit**, kids play **Henchmen** looting **LEGO Gotham ATMs** and evading **Security** teams. Younger kids might not parse that robbing ATMs is roleplay, not a how-to. The mode is cops-and-robbers at heart, but the language is literal (loot, escape, criminal), and chat can drift into edgy heist talk.

Car meet Discord rabbit hole

Kids join external **car meet Discord servers** (267k+ members) to plan events and share builds. These are not moderated by Roblox or the developer. Your kid might land in channels with older teens talking about real cars, street racing, or off-topic content. **Discord invites posted in-game chat** are the entry point.

Trade scams for rare vehicles

Limited-edition cars from old events trade hands in DMs, and scammers offer duped vehicles or fake Robux deals. Your kid might get **"I'll give you the Batmobile for R$500 outside the game"** messages. The in-game chat and Discord are where these offers land.

Parent takeaway

The driving and racing are fine for any age that can read the UI, but the **premium crate gambling** and **external Discord car meet culture** make this a guided experience for under-13s. Lock chat to Friends, turn off DMs so trade scammers and Discord invites do not land in their inbox, and set a monthly Robux spending cap you both agree on. If your kid is obsessed with the Batmobile, acknowledge the FOMO and redirect to the free heist mode where they can still earn Studs and roleplay.

Read the full [LEGO BATMAN] Driving Empire 🏎️ Car Racing parent guide on Roblox Ready