Five nights at Fazbear's
Five nights at Fazbear's - Play Online
You're stuck in an office with killer animatronics, and you've got to survive until 6 AM. This is a straight-up Five Nights at Freddy's clone, no pretending otherwise—it borrows the same camera-flipping, door-slamming, power-management formula that made the original a phenomenon. Your shift at Fazbear's pizzeria turns into a nightmare when Fazbear and Golden Fazbear start roaming the halls. Watch cameras, slam doors, conserve power, and pray you make it to morning. It's a browser-based indie horror that rides the FNAF wave hard, complete with meme-worthy bear characters and that signature tension of "do I check the cameras or save battery?"
Key Features
- 5 Nights to Survive: Each shift gets progressively harder as the animatronics become more aggressive.
- Runs in Your Browser: No downloads, no install—works on PC and mobile through any modern browser.
- Classic FNAF Mechanics: Security cameras, door controls, hallway lights, and a draining power meter that forces tough choices.
- Meme-Friendly Characters: Features Freddy Fazbear-style bears that the internet has turned into icons—expect recognizable horror mascots.
How to Play Five nights at Fazbear's
The concept is simple: survive until 6 AM. Actually doing it? That's where things get sweaty.
Monitor the Security Cameras
You tap the bottom button to open your tablet and cycle through different camera feeds. Swipe or click the sides of your screen to rotate the camera view in your office. The animatronics move through specific routes, and you need to track where Fazbear and Golden Fazbear are lurking. The grainy security footage with those classic scanlines makes it hard to spot them sometimes, but if you lose track, they'll be at your door before you know it.
Defend Your Office Doors
When an animatronic gets close to your left or right hallway, you need to act fast. Hit the yellow button near each doorway to turn on the hallway light—this lets you peek outside without draining as much power. If you see a bear staring back at you, immediately slam the red button to close the door. Keep it shut until the threat leaves. But here's the kicker: closed doors eat your electricity like crazy. Leave them shut too long and you'll run out of power completely, which means game over when the lights go out.
Survive Until 6:00 AM
Each night lasts several minutes of real time. Your goal is to balance camera checks, door usage, and light peeks while watching that battery percentage tick down. Run out of power before 6 AM hits, and you're defenseless—the animatronics will get you. Make it to 6:00, and you move to the next night with tougher AI patterns. Beat all five nights and you've conquered the game.
Who is Five nights at Fazbear's for?
This is for FNAF fans who want a quick horror fix without installing anything. If you loved the original Five Nights at Freddy's but want something you can play during a study break or on a school Chromebook, this hits that spot. It's also good for younger players who are into mascot horror and meme culture—the Fazbear characters are recognizable internet icons at this point. That said, if you want deep storytelling or polished graphics, look elsewhere. This is a bare-bones clone for people chasing that specific adrenaline rush of door-slamming panic.
The Gameplay Vibe
It's stressful in short bursts. The first couple minutes of each night are quiet—you're checking cameras, everything seems manageable. Then the animatronics start moving, and suddenly you're frantically flipping between feeds, hearing footsteps, slamming doors at the last second. The 3D graphics are pretty basic—low-poly models, flat lighting, simple textures—but the scanline filter on the camera views adds just enough atmosphere to sell the security cam aesthetic. There's minimal sound design (footsteps, static, maybe a jump scare noise), so it won't blow your mind audiovisually, but it gets the job done. It feels like a budget tribute to the FNAF formula rather than something trying to innovate.
Technical Check: Saves & Performance
The game saves your progress automatically using browser storage, so you can quit after beating Night 2 and come back later without losing your place—just don't clear your browser cache or you'll start over. Performance-wise, this runs smooth even on older PCs or basic laptops. The graphics are simple enough that you won't get lag spikes, and the Unity web build loads fast. Mobile players can tap to control everything, though the smaller screen makes checking cameras a bit fiddly on phones—tablets work better.
Quick Verdict: Pros & Cons
A solid FNAF clone for quick horror sessions, but it's not hiding what it is.
- ✅ Pro: Instant nostalgia if you loved Five Nights at Freddy's—the mechanics are copied faithfully.
- ✅ Pro: No download required, runs anywhere, perfect for killing time with some jump scares.
- ❌ Con: Zero originality—this is a straight clone with rougher visuals and no new ideas. If you've played FNAF, you've already experienced this exact loop.
Controls
Controls are responsive enough, though mobile touch can feel cramped on smaller screens.
- Desktop: Mouse to rotate camera view, click buttons to open tablet, toggle doors (red), and lights (yellow).
- Mobile: Tap screen edges to look around, tap bottom button for tablet, tap red/yellow buttons to control doors and lights.
Release Date & Developer
Developed by Viacheslav_Develop and released on November 13, 2024. It's an indie project clearly inspired by the FNAF phenomenon, built in Unity for browser play.




