Ever played those classic Natural Disaster Survival games on Roblox? This is exactly that, but mashed up with obby parkour. You're dropped onto floating maps with a bunch of other players, and nature immediately tries to murder you with tornadoes, floods, lava, and acid rain. Your job? Jump, dodge, and climb to high ground before you get swept away. It's chaotic, fast, and honestly pretty stressful when that tornado starts spinning straight toward you.
The concept is simple: survive 2-3 minutes of environmental chaos. Actually pulling it off takes practice.
You control your character with WASD on desktop or the joystick on mobile. Spacebar (or the button on screen) makes you jump. The movement feels like standard Roblox physics—a little floaty, but responsive enough once you get the rhythm. You'll swipe to rotate the camera on touch screens, which gets tricky when you're trying to track a tornado while also platforming.
Each round announces what's coming—flood, tornado, acid rain, whatever. The key is spotting the safe zones immediately. When a tornado spawns, you need to either find elevation or duck behind solid structures. Floods mean get to the highest platform fast. Lava rises from the bottom, so standing around on ground level is a death sentence. The disasters actually move and spread, so your "safe spot" might only buy you 30 seconds.
Survive a round, you get coins or points (typical Roblox progression). You can use those to unlock pets that give passive bonuses, buy starting boosters, or perform "rebirths" that reset your progress but increase your earning multiplier. It's the classic grind loop—play enough, get stronger, survive longer, repeat.
This is perfect for younger players or anyone who wants quick, low-stakes rounds of chaos. If you're between 6-12 years old or just killing time on your phone, you'll probably enjoy the unpredictable mayhem. It's not a skill-based precision platformer—more like a social party game where everyone's screaming and running from the same tornado. If you need deep mechanics or high-fidelity graphics, this isn't it.
It feels like controlled panic. The moment the disaster warning pops up, everyone scatters like ants. The visuals are bottom-tier Roblox—blocky characters, flat textures, checkerboard floors that look like placeholders someone forgot to replace. The tornado is literally just brown spinning particles. There's no real music to speak of, just environmental sound effects and the ambient noise of disasters. It's not pretty, but the chaos is genuinely fun in short bursts. After 20 minutes though, it gets repetitive since the maps don't vary much and the disasters follow predictable patterns.
Your progress saves automatically through the Roblox platform, so as long as you're logged in, your pets and currency stick around. Performance-wise, this runs on a potato—I didn't see a single frame drop even with 15+ players on screen and a tornado tearing through. The super low-poly art style means even older phones handle it fine. Just make sure you have a stable internet connection since it's online multiplayer.
A solid time-waster if you like quick arcade-style survival rounds with friends.
Standard Roblox controls. They work fine, though the camera can be clunky on mobile when you're panicking.
Survive the Disasters: Obby was developed by liss48 and released on November 24, 2025. It's hosted on the Roblox platform.