This is pure chaos wrapped in neon portals and lava floors. Your Obby Parkour throws you into a third-person obstacle course where one wrong jump sends you back to the last checkpoint. It's the kind of game that makes you yell at your screen, then immediately retry. Think Roblox's endless obby maps mixed with the reflex demands of Super Mario 3D World, except you'll die fifty times before finding the right path.
The learning curve is a brick wall. You'll die constantly until muscle memory kicks in.
Desktop controls are snappy. Mobile takes getting used to.
You spawn on a platform surrounded by lava. The goal's simple: reach the glowing blue portal without falling. Hexagonal stone platforms float in sequence. Miss one jump and the lava resets you to the last checkpoint. Early levels teach timing with trampolines and narrow translucent bridges. The rubber duck models scattered around? Pure decoration. Ignore them.
Levels introduce spinning traps and water hazards that kill momentum. Deadly skeletons patrol certain zones, forcing you to time sprints between their patrol routes. Ice paths remove all friction—momentum carries you off edges if you're not careful. Horror mazes appear later with identical-looking corridors. The trick is memorizing visual landmarks like wall textures or portal placements. No hints. Just trial and death.
Hidden paths unlock after you collect specific trophies. Some stages have secret portals that skip entire obstacle chains. The little dragon collectible hides in absurd spots—behind fake walls or under breakable platforms. Finding it requires exploring every corner instead of rushing to the finish. Bonus zones reward precision with cosmetic unlocks, though the game doesn't explain what those unlocks are.
This targets the Roblox crowd—kids and teens who thrive on repetitive challenges and bragging rights. Sessions run 10-30 minutes depending on how stubborn you are. Perfect for players who don't mind retrying the same jump seventy times. If you rage-quit easily, skip this. It's built to frustrate you into improvement.
It feels scrappy. The textures tile aggressively, creating a "grid prison" aesthetic that screams asset flip. Lighting doesn't match between your character and the environment, making everything look pasted together. But the core loop works—run, jump, fail, retry. The lava texture glows bright enough to hurt your eyes during late-night sessions. No post-processing smooths the edges. It's raw, unpolished, and somehow still addictive when you're chasing that one trophy.
1. Saves: Progress saves locally in your browser cache. Clear your cache, lose everything. No cloud sync mentioned.
2. Performance: Runs smooth at 60fps on desktop. Mobile FPS drops during trap-heavy zones with multiple players on screen. Expect stutters on older phones.
It's a competent time-waster buried under amateur visuals and zero innovation.
Your Obby Parkour was developed by KreizLand. Released in October 2025.