Ever wanted a quick Counter-Strike fix but don't have the storage or specs? MFPS:Military Combat is a bare-bones military FPS that runs straight in your browser. You're dropped into industrial warzones against bots and other players with one simple goal: rack up kills, stay alive, and dominate the scoreboard. It's fast-paced chaos with grenades, sniper rifles, and shotguns—no fluff, just gunfights.
Jump in, shoot stuff, don't die. Sounds easy, but you'll be testing your reflexes against enemies popping up everywhere.
You move with WASD keys like any classic shooter. Left mouse click fires your weapon, right mouse click brings up your scope or performs special actions like switching fire modes. The maps are industrial—lots of shipping containers, warning signs, and open courtyards. Get familiar with cover points fast, because standing still means you're target practice.
Every match is a deathmatch scramble. Enemies are labeled "BOT" with colored name tags, making them easy to spot. Keep your eyes on the kill feed in the top right—it'll tell you who's dominating and who just got smoked. You respawn instantly after death, which keeps the pace frantic. Don't worry about strategy here; it's all about reaction speed and weapon switching. If you get caught reloading a shotgun in the open, you're toast.
After each match, you earn points or currency (the game has a "Guest" login system, so there's probably account progression tied to skins or weapon unlocks). Use those to grab better gear or cosmetics. The weapon hotbar shows slots 1-4, so you can carry multiple guns and switch on the fly. Grenade spam is real—use it.
This is perfect for younger teens or anyone stuck on a low-spec machine who wants a quick FPS fix during lunch break. If you're chasing photorealistic graphics or deep tactical gameplay, this isn't it. But if you just want to zone out, shoot bots, and feel like you're in a simplified Call of Duty match without the 100GB download, you're in the right place. It's also great for "unblocked games" situations—runs in most browsers without admin permissions.
Let's be real: this looks and feels like a 2012 browser shooter. The textures are flat, the lighting is baked in, and the weapon models are extremely low-poly. Your gloves look like they were painted with a single yellow color and called finished. The explosion effects are basic particle sprites, and there's zero modern polish like ambient occlusion or reflections. But here's the thing—it runs smooth because of that simplicity. The audio is generic military shooter fare: gunshots crack, grenades thump, and the kill notification sounds satisfying enough. It's not pretty, but it's functional chaos.
The game uses a "Guest" login system, which means your progress (kills, unlocks, maybe skins) is probably saved to browser cache or a lightweight backend account. If you clear your cookies, you might lose cosmetics, but matches themselves are session-based anyway. Performance-wise, this will run on a potato. I'm talking integrated graphics from 2010-era laptops. The trade-off is that it looks dated, but you'll get 60fps even on weak hardware.
A solid time-killer if you've got 15 minutes and zero patience for installs.
Responsive enough for a browser game, though don't expect the crisp input of a native client. Mouse sensitivity feels standard.
Developed by HicKupu and released on November 10, 2025. It's part of that wave of lightweight browser shooters designed for accessibility over spectacle.