WHITE ROOMS
Everything here looks simple. Thatās the problem.
WHITE ROOMS is a first-person puzzle game set entirely in clean, empty, white spaces.
Each room gives you a clear objective.
Each room lies to you in a different way.
There are no enemies (maybe some).
No timers you need to outrun (a little bit of that).
No precision jumps or mechanical skill checks (hmm, maybe a bit of that too).
If you fail, itās not because you were slow.
Itās because you trusted something you shouldnāt have.
What kind of game is this?
You walk into a room.
Thereās a door (sometimes a plain white wall).
Thereās usually an obvious solution.
Itās wrong.
Every room is built around a single idea:
a rule that seems reasonable, helpful, or familiar, until it quietly betrays you.
The game never explains what went wrong.
It just restarts the room and lets you sit with the mistake.
Features
Minimalist first-person puzzle design
One-button interaction, fixed movement speed
No combat, no reflex challenges
Rooms that play with logic, perception, time and trust
A clean white aesthetic that slowly becomes uncomfortable
What this game is not
Not a horror game with jump scares (oh yes)
Not a physics sandbox
Not a āgotchaā troll game
Not fair in the way you expect
A warning
If youāre the kind of player who likes mastering systems, optimizing routes, and getting better through repetitionā¦
this game will actively fight you.
WHITE ROOMS is about unlearning assumptions, not improving execution.
Sometimes the safest thing to do is nothing.
Sometimes it isnāt.