






Rise of the Dead
Zombie Space Episode II
99 Nights in the Forest. Horror Multiplayer
Pregnant Mother Simulator
Fruit Merge: Juicy Drop Game
Playground Man! Ragdoll Show!
Piece of Cake: Merge & Bake
Hidden Object: My Hotel
Snake 2048
Hidden Object: Clues and MysteriesThat's Not My Neighbor! Or is It?
That's Not My Neighbor! Or is It? - Play Online
Ever played Papers, Please and thought "What if the people trying to get in were literal monsters?" That's exactly what you're dealing with here. You're stuck in a security booth checking IDs, and your only job is to separate real neighbors from shape-shifting creatures trying to sneak past you. One wrong click and you've either locked out poor Mrs. Henderson or let a six-eyed nightmare into the building. It's a detective game wrapped in paranoia, and honestly? It's way more stressful than it looks.
Key Features
- Spot-the-Difference Tension: Cross-reference ID cards with the person standing in front of you—tiny details matter.
- Browser-Based Convenience: Runs smooth in any modern browser, no downloads or installs needed.
- Escalating Difficulty: Monsters get sneakier each day, with subtler differences and better disguises.
- Simple But Effective Art: Hand-drawn 2D style with thick outlines—easy to read, creepy when it needs to be.
How to Play That's Not My Neighbor! Or is It?
Getting started is dead simple, but don't let that fool you—the pressure ramps up fast.
Check the Documents
When someone shows up at your window, they hand you their ID card and entry request. You click on these documents to read them carefully. Look at their photo, their name, their apartment number. Then click the whitelist on the right side of the screen to see who's actually supposed to live in the building. This is your Bible—memorize it.
Spot the Monsters
Here's where it gets tense. Stare at the person's face on your security monitor. Compare it to the photo on their ID. Does something look off? Extra eyes? Weird skin tone? Shifted facial features? Monsters aren't perfect at copying humans. Sometimes the differences are obvious (like a third eyeball), sometimes it's just... a feeling. Trust your gut, but double-check the paperwork first.
Make the Call
Hit the green button on the right to let them through if everything checks out. Smash the red button on the left if you think they're a monster. Get it right and you move to the next visitor. Get it wrong—let a monster in or deny a real neighbor—and you're one step closer to a game over. The days keep cycling, and the mistakes pile up if you're not careful.
Who is That's Not My Neighbor! Or is It? for?
This one's perfect for players who love pattern recognition and don't mind a little stress. If you're a fan of detective games or logic puzzles, you'll dig this. It's rated for teens and up—there's no gore, but the monster designs can be unsettling in that uncanny valley way. Casual players can jump in for a quick 5-minute session, but hardcore types will get hooked trying to beat their streak without mistakes. Not great if you want mindless action—this requires focus.
The Gameplay Vibe
It's slow-burn tension. You're not dodging bullets or racing a clock (at least not visibly), but your heart rate will still climb. Every knock on the window makes you second-guess yourself. The visuals are basic—flat colors, simple animations—but that minimalism actually works in its favor. The monsters stand out just enough to mess with you. There's no music during gameplay, just ambient sounds and the occasional creak, which makes it feel lonelier and more claustrophobic. It's the kind of game where you lean forward without realizing it.
Technical Check: Saves & Performance
The game auto-saves your progress in your browser's local storage, so you can close the tab and pick up where you left off—just don't go clearing your cache like a maniac. Performance-wise, it's light as a feather. I had zero lag on a mid-range laptop, and it should run fine even on older machines or budget Chromebooks. The Unity build is well-optimized for browser play, which is rare enough to be worth mentioning.
Quick Verdict: Pros & Cons
A solid indie take on the document-verification genre that nails the core loop.
- ✅ Pro: Instant satisfaction when you catch a well-disguised monster—feels genuinely clever.
- ✅ Pro: No download barrier, just click and play from any device.
- ❌ Con: After a few rounds, the monster variations start repeating, which kills the surprise factor a bit.
Controls
Super responsive point-and-click interface. Everything reacts immediately, no input delay.
- Desktop: Mouse to click on documents, buttons, and the whitelist. That's it.
- Mobile: Tap the screen—same functionality, works great on phones and tablets.
Release Date & Developer
Developed by QroutsDepletingEntertainment and released on November 13, 2024. It's a recent drop, so expect potential updates and bug fixes as the community grows.

