warped the world, stretching the walls into nauseating, liquid shapes.
The stream ended abruptly. When it came back online an hour later, GhostByte's room was empty. The only thing left on camera was his monitor, which was physically cracked down the middle, despite no one having touched it.
caused the screen to shatter into jagged shards, revealing brief, flickering images of a real-world office—desks overturned, monitors glowing with static, and a calendar frozen on a date that hadn't happened yet.
As players progressed, the game began to "leak." Users reported that after closing the application, their desktop wallpapers would subtly distort, as if the icons were being pulled toward the center of the screen. One popular streamer, GhostByte , attempted to reach the end of version 1.1 during a live broadcast. He chose "Break" fifty times in a row.
Those who managed to bypass the Windows Defender warnings found themselves in a low-poly, first-person environment. There were no instructions. The player controlled a nameless character in a room made of shifting, geometric glass. The only mechanic was a single button prompt: "Bend" or "Break."