Georgian Police
Georgian Police (officially titled Police or ქართული პოლიცია / Geo Police) is a free promotional first-person shooter developed in 2011 by the Georgian studio GRed (with involvement from the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Georgia). It was created as a propaganda-style game to promote the work of the Georgian Patrol Police, including scenarios involving the “virtual hunt down of criminals and Russian spies.” The game comes in two main parts (sometimes called Geo Police / Georgian Police 1 and 2, with a cancelled Geo Police 3 mentioned in old sources), and both are available as free downloads or via community archives. It uses the Unreal Development Kit (UDK) and is known for its unintentionally hilarious tone and abrupt shift from police procedural to all-out shooting gallery.
Core Story
You play as a Georgian police officer responding to various incidents. The game starts with relatively tame scenarios (e.g., a bank robbery or hostage situation) but quickly escalates into over-the-top action involving terrorists, criminals, and implied foreign agents. The narrative is minimal and serves mostly as an excuse for gunplay, with heavy patriotic undertones praising the Georgian police force. The second part continues similar themes with more levels, including investigation/puzzle elements and an “Easter egg” level.
Gameplay and Features
Georgian Police is a short, linear FPS with a very basic structure:
- Early sections: Simple police work (investigation, talking to suspects, basic puzzle-like elements).
- Main gameplay: Quickly turns into a classic Unreal Engine shooting gallery. You mow down waves of enemies with pistols, AK-style rifles, and other weapons in indoor and outdoor environments.
- Levels: A handful of short missions across the duology (typically 3–5 levels total). One part includes a hostage rescue, while the other adds more action-oriented sequences.
- Tone: Starts somewhat restrained but becomes absurdly violent and repetitive. The game is in Georgian (with some English text in places), but gameplay is intuitive enough that language is not a major barrier.
- Length: Extremely short — the full duology can be completed in 30–90 minutes depending on how thoroughly you explore.
It has no multiplayer, co-op, or significant replay value beyond curiosity or meme value. The game is often compared to low-budget Eastern European shooters of the era and is frequently featured in “so-bad-it’s-good” articles for its jarring tone shift and amateurish execution.
PC Version (2011, still available in 2026)
This is the only official version — no console ports (Switch, PS, Xbox, etc.) ever existed. The game is completely free and can be found on:
- Archive.org (full Geo Police Duology download)
- Georgian fan sites and torrents (portable versions)
- Steam Workshop mods that recreate Georgian police vehicles or characters in other games
It runs on very low-spec hardware thanks to UDK. No official Steam page exists for the main game itself (only related workshop items). Community patches or locale fixes are sometimes needed for proper text display on modern Windows. Visuals and controls feel very dated even by 2011 standards, with stiff animations and repetitive enemy placement.
Quick Note
Georgian Police is a rare promotional title commissioned by Georgia’s Ministry of Internal Affairs. It is not a serious police simulator like Police Quest — it quickly devolves into a chaotic, body-count-heavy shooter with heavy propaganda elements. Today it is mostly played for its comedic value, meme status, and as a piece of obscure gaming history. The duology is easy to find for free and takes almost no time to finish.
If you enjoy bizarre, low-budget propaganda games or “crapshoot” classics, Georgian Police delivers unintentional entertainment in spades: “Protect Georgia… one absurd shooting gallery at a time.” You can grab the full duology from archive.org or search for “Geo Police” / “Georgian Police” downloads. Expect short sessions filled with unintentional comedy rather than polished gameplay.
PC