If you've ever watched a kid spend hours on Roblox jumping across floating platforms, you already know what this is. Your Obby Parkour is a pure obstacle course platformer—no story, no combat, just you, some blocks, and a whole lot of lava. The goal is simple: jump from checkpoint to checkpoint without falling into hazards, and make it to the glowing portal at the end. It's the kind of game where "one more try" turns into 30 minutes of frustration and triumph.
Getting started is dead simple, but making it past level 10 without rage-quitting? That's the real test.
You control your character with WASD keys for movement and Space to jump. The camera follows behind you in third-person view, and you'll need to judge distances carefully—some platforms are tiny hexagons barely wider than your avatar. On mobile, you use the on-screen joystick and jump button. The physics feel floaty, so don't expect tight platforming like Mario. You'll overshoot jumps until you get used to the momentum.
The real challenge isn't just jumping—it's dodging death traps. You'll cross narrow blue bridges over lava textures that reset you to the last checkpoint if you fall. Watch for spinning traps, trampolines that launch you in unpredictable directions, and slippery ice paths that kill your traction. Some levels throw skeletons or portals at you that teleport you backward. The game doesn't hold your hand; you learn by dying repeatedly.
Each stage ends with a glowing blue portal. Touch it, and you're onto the next course. The difficulty ramps up fast—early levels have wide platforms and obvious paths, but later zones feature mazes where you can literally get lost for minutes. There are bonus zones and secret shortcuts if you're brave enough to jump toward suspicious-looking platforms that seem just out of reach. Collect trophies along the way to prove you didn't just skip to easier sections.
This is tailor-made for kids aged 6-12 who live on YouTube watching Obby playthroughs, but honestly, anyone who wants a no-brain challenge can jump in. It's perfect if you have 15 minutes to kill and want something that doesn't require reading tutorials or managing inventory systems. Parents: it's completely safe—no violence, no chat toxicity, just pure jumping frustration. Hardcore platformer fans might find it too simple and janky, but if you grew up on flash games or mobile time-wasters, you'll feel right at home.
The vibe is casual chaos with zero polish. Visually, it's rough—textures tile awkwardly across platforms, the lighting is flat, and the anime-style character models look pasted onto the environment. There's no ambient music (at least none that stood out), so you're mostly hearing footsteps and jump sound effects on repeat. It feels like a budget Roblox map exported as a standalone game. The skybox is a stretched low-res image, and some wall textures wrap so badly you can see the seams. But here's the thing: it runs smoothly, loads instantly, and the core loop of "jump, fail, retry" works. It's not trying to be beautiful—it's trying to be playable, and it succeeds at that.
The game saves your progress automatically using browser cache, so you can close the tab and pick up where you left off—just don't clear your browsing data or you'll start over. Performance-wise, this runs on a potato. I tested it on an older laptop and mobile, and both handled it fine. The low-poly assets and lack of dynamic lighting mean even budget phones from 2020 should handle this without lag. No downloads, no installs, just click and play.
A solid time-killer if you set your expectations correctly—this isn't a AAA platformer, it's a free browser Obby that does the job.
Controls are responsive enough, though the floaty jump physics take getting used to. No input lag, which is critical for platformers.
Developed by KreizLand and released on October 16, 2025. It's a brand-new release, so expect updates or bug fixes as players discover exploits.