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Hazmob FPS: Online Shooter
Sprunki Sandbox: Ragdoll Playground Mode
Snake 2048
Piece of Cake: Merge & Bake
Hidden Object: Clues and Mysteries
Hidden Object: My Hotel
Playground Man! Ragdoll Show!Monster hunt
Monster hunt - Play Online
You're tracking Bigfoot through a foggy forest at night, and guess what? He's tracking you right back. This first-person horror-shooter gives me serious indie survival vibes—think of those tense Bigfoot hunting games but stripped down for quick browser sessions. Your mission: track the legendary creature using cameras, traps, and limited ammo before he makes you his prey. It's a deadly game of cat-and-mouse where every step counts, literally—because your hunter moves like he's wading through mud.
Key Features
- Strategic Hunter Tools: Deploy cameras to monitor areas, set meat bait for ambushes, and use traps to slow down your target.
- Tense Cat-and-Mouse Gameplay: Bigfoot actively hunts you while you hunt him—expect ambushes and sudden encounters.
- Resource Management Combat: Limited ammo and slow movement force you to plan every shot and route carefully.
- Desktop & Mobile Support: Runs smooth on both PC browsers and mobile devices with adapted touch controls.
How to Play Monster hunt
Getting started is straightforward, but surviving more than five minutes? That's the real challenge.
Setting Up Your Surveillance Network
You start in a dark forest with basic equipment. Use the F key to place cameras in strategic spots—near cabins, open clearings, or anywhere you think Bigfoot might prowl. These cameras are your eyes when you can't be everywhere at once. Drop meat bait to lure the creature into kill zones. On desktop, you move with WASD keys and look around with your mouse. Mobile players get virtual joysticks that work well enough, though precision aiming gets tricky during panic moments.
Surviving the Hunt
Here's the kicker: you move incredibly slow. Every decision matters because you can't just sprint away from danger. When Bigfoot gets close, the screen shifts to that aggressive red lighting and a boss health bar appears—that's your cue to either stand your ground or use the flare gun to scare him off temporarily. Hold left mouse button to steady your aim and fire, because this beast takes multiple shots to bring down. The quick 180-degree turn on the E key saved my life more than once when I heard something behind me. Crouch with Left Ctrl to move quieter, reload with R before you're empty, and conserve every bullet like it's precious—because it is.
Tracking and Takedown
Check your minimap constantly. The red eye icon shows when Bigfoot has detected you. Use your camera feeds to track his movement patterns, set up ambush points with traps, and wait for the perfect moment to engage. You can switch weapons with the mouse wheel—I alternated between the shotgun for close encounters and the revolver when I needed precision. The goal is simple: take him down before he takes you. But with that slow movement speed and limited supplies, every encounter feels like a genuine fight for survival.
Who is Monster hunt for?
This one's for horror fans who enjoy tension over jump scares, and players who like tactical survival instead of run-and-gun action. If you loved games like Witch Hunt or those Siren Head mobile games, you'll dig this. It's rated for teens and up—there's violence but nothing gratuitous. Not recommended if you hate slow-paced gameplay or get frustrated by limited resources. Perfect for a 20-minute session when you want something genuinely tense without a huge time commitment.
The Gameplay Vibe
It's stressful in the best way. The fog limits your vision to maybe 20 feet, your flashlight cone feels painfully narrow, and that slow movement speed creates constant dread. Visually, it's pretty basic Unity work—low-poly trees, simple lighting, and fog that clearly hides a short draw distance. The graphics won't blow you away, but they get the job done for atmosphere. When that boss health bar appears and the lighting goes red, your heart rate definitely spikes. The sound design does most of the heavy lifting—distant growls and snapping branches keep you paranoid. It's not polished AAA quality, but it nails that indie horror tension.
Technical Check: Saves & Performance
The game saves your progress automatically through browser cache, so don't go clearing your history mid-hunt or you'll lose everything. Performance-wise, it runs smooth even on older hardware—I didn't experience any lag or frame drops, which is crucial when you need to react quickly. The mobile version adapts well to smaller screens, though the UI can feel a bit cluttered with all the equipment icons. Load times are fast, maybe 10 seconds tops to get into the forest.
Quick Verdict: Pros & Cons
A solid browser-based horror experience that delivers genuine tension without requiring downloads or high-end hardware.
- ✅ Pro: Actually scary—the slow movement and limited resources create real tension.
- ✅ Pro: Strategic depth with cameras, traps, and resource management keeps it engaging.
- ❌ Con: The ultra-slow movement speed might frustrate players who prefer faster-paced action.
Controls
Responsive enough for what the game demands, though the slow character speed is intentional design, not a control issue.
- Desktop: WASD to move, Mouse to aim, LMB to shoot, R to reload, F to interact with traps/cameras, E for quick 180° turn, Space to jump, Left Ctrl to crouch, Mouse wheel or number keys to switch weapons.
- Mobile: Virtual joysticks for movement and camera, on-screen buttons for shooting, reloading, and equipment interaction.
Release Date & Developer
Developed by GMD and released on June 18, 2025. It's a relatively fresh addition to the browser horror genre.

