Survival horror meets resource grind. 99 Nights In The Forest drops you alone in a dark forest where a monstrous deer hunts you every single night. Keep the fire alive or die. Simple as that.
Survive 99 consecutive nights. During the day, scavenge wood, food, and supplies. At night, feed the fire — because the moment it goes out, the creature comes. Make it to dawn. Repeat. Get harder every cycle.
The second sunrise hits, move fast. Chop trees for wood. Hunt or forage for food. Grab any metal or useful items scattered around. Press E to interact with objects. Hit TAB to check your inventory — know what you have before night falls. Wasted daylight is a death sentence.
Darkness drops and the deer wakes up. That fire is your only shield. Dump wood into it constantly. Crouch with C to move quietly if you need to grab nearby resources without drawing attention. Run with Shift when panic hits. The fire dims? Sprint back. No exceptions.
Early nights feel manageable. Don't get comfortable. Stock wood reserves beyond what you think you need — nights get longer, temperatures drop, the monster gets faster. Prioritize food with F to maintain stamina for running. Attack threats with LMB only when cornered. Avoidance beats combat every time. Drop (Q) dead weight items and keep your inventory lean for what actually matters.
Built for survival horror fans who like a genuine pressure loop — not just jump scares. If you grind Obby games for the challenge rush, this hits different. The resource management layer adds real stakes beyond dodging obstacles. Fans of browser-based survival crafting — think stripped-down Minecraft tension with a single relentless threat — will feel right at home. Also works perfectly for quick 10-minute sessions where you push one more night further than yesterday. The full 99 Nights In The Forest series keeps building on this formula if you want more after clearing the base game.
If you enjoy fast-reaction browser survival, Escape Tsunami for Brainrots scratches that same "run or die" itch with a totally different vibe. And for players who love obstacle-based progression with unlockable worlds, Obby but You're on a Bike is worth a session between forest nights. The platformer crowd that grinds jumping games or pushes through obstacles games will find the survival loop here just as addictive — different mechanics, same "one more run" energy. Even fans of Vex games and Helix games tend to stick around once the night-one deer scare hooks them.
99 Nights In The Forest was developed by DarkPlay. Released on Playgama: February 27, 2026.