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Hidden Object: My HotelFind Visitors - 99 Nights
Find Visitors - 99 Nights - Play Online
Ever played Papers, Please or That's Not My Neighbor? This is basically that, but you're checking forest creatures instead of people at a border. You're the night manager of a forest refuge, and your job is simple but nerve-wracking: let the real forest animals in and keep the monsters—called "Visitors"—out. One wrong call and things get creepy fast. It's a spot-the-difference detective game wrapped in dark, atmospheric vibes.
Key Features
- 99 Nights to Survive: The title promises a marathon of nerve-testing shifts.
- Works Anywhere: Simple 2D graphics mean it runs smooth on older PCs and phones without lag.
- Scanning Mechanics: Check IDs, examine teeth, pupils, and aura photos to spot the fakes.
- Binary High-Stakes Choices: Every decision—Let In or Drive Away—matters. No middle ground.
How to Play Find Visitors - 99 Nights
Getting started is easy—just point and click. But staying alive when a monster's staring you down? That's the real challenge.
Examine Every Detail
You start by clicking the "Check" button when a creature shows up at your station. The game gives you multiple ways to inspect them: look at their teeth for blood or unnatural whiteness, scan their eyes for red sclera or twitchy pupils, and run an aura photo to check for red spots. The "Rules" button is your best friend—keep it open. The signs of a Visitor are subtle, and if you forget one, you're toast.
Make the Call
Once you've finished your inspection, you hit one of two buttons: "Let In" if they're a real forest creature, or "Drive Away" if you spotted something off. There's no undo button. You commit, and the game moves forward. Miss a Visitor and let them in? You'll know immediately because the atmosphere shifts and things get darker. The tension comes from that split-second doubt—did I see blood on those teeth, or was it a shadow?
Survive the Night Shift
Your goal is to rack up verified entries without letting monsters slip through. The counter at the top tracks your progress. As nights go on, the Visitors get sneakier—some barely show signs, others try to distract you with dialogue. You're racing against your own paranoia and the game's escalating difficulty. There's no weapon, no second chances. Just your eyes and your nerves.
Who is Find Visitors - 99 Nights for?
Perfect for fans of indie horror puzzles who love that "one more round" feeling. If you enjoyed the stress of checking documents in Papers, Please or the jumpscare tension of FNAF, this hits the same nerve. It's not for young kids—the monster designs and dark atmosphere are genuinely unsettling. Best for teens and adults who like detective games with consequences and don't mind losing sleep over a missed detail.
The Gameplay Vibe
It's slow-burn dread mixed with sudden panic. The game doesn't rush you at first, but the longer you stare at a creature's face trying to decide, the more your brain starts inventing problems. The neon green UI on pitch-black backgrounds gives it that analog horror aesthetic—think VHS tapes and grainy security footage. The music is minimal, mostly ambient hums and distant forest sounds, which makes every creak feel intentional. Visually, it's rough around the edges—low-budget vector art with thick outlines—but that actually adds to the creepy vibe. It doesn't try to look AAA; it leans into the "indie horror game made by one person" aesthetic hard.
Technical Check: Saves & Performance
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 lose your night count. Performance is solid. The simple 2D graphics mean it runs smooth even on older laptops or budget phones. No lag, no stuttering. I tested it on a mid-range phone and it responded instantly to taps. The only hiccup is if your internet connection drops during the initial load, but once it's running, you're good.
Quick Verdict: Pros & Cons
A tense, addictive clone that nails the "one more shift" loop, but it's not breaking any new ground.
- ✅ Pro: Instant tension. The moment a creature appears, your heart rate spikes.
- ✅ Pro: No downloads, no ads interrupting gameplay. Just pure paranoia.
- ❌ Con: It's extremely derivative. If you've played That's Not My Neighbor, this feels like a reskin with a forest theme instead of apartments.
Controls
Responsive and intuitive. No complaints here—everything reacts the moment you click or tap.
- Desktop: Mouse-only. Click buttons to check, scan, let in, or drive away.
- Mobile: Tap the buttons. The UI is big enough that you won't miss on a smaller screen.
Release Date & Developer
Developed by Kaban_VRV and released on October 23, 2025. It's a solo indie project, and you can tell—the rough edges and hyper-focused gameplay loop scream "one person's vision."
FAQ
Where can I play Find Visitors - 99 Nights?
How do I spot a Visitor?
Is there a mobile version?
Video
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Robbie: Draw your Sword

