Wildlife: Africa Hunting 3D
Wildlife: Africa Hunting 3D - Play Online
Ever wanted to go on a safari but with guns instead of cameras? Wildlife: Africa Hunting 3D drops you into a low-poly African wilderness where you're the apex predator. Hunt hippos, zebras, lions, and more across an open-world savanna. The animals hear your footsteps and gunshots, so stealth matters—crouch, aim, and take your shot before they bolt. It's a simple hunting loop with progression: kill targets, earn currency, unlock better guns. Perfect for quick sessions when you want to shoot something that isn't another player.
Key Features
- Arsenal of Weapons: Shotguns, sniper rifles, assault rifles—plenty of firepower to unlock as you earn currency.
- Living Ecosystem: Animals react to sound. Fire a loud gun, and everything nearby scatters. Some predators even attack back.
- Open-World Exploration: Roam across savanna biomes, desert areas, and plains looking for your next target.
- Runs Anywhere: Built in Unity with simple low-poly graphics, so it loads fast and works on older PCs and phones without lag.
How to Play Wildlife: Africa Hunting 3D
Getting started is dead simple—pick your language, choose your device type, and you're dropped into the wild with a gun and a mission list.
Tracking and Stalking Your Prey
You'll spawn in a section of the map with specific objectives—like "Kill 2 zebras and 1 rhino." Use the radar in the corner to locate animals. Move with WASD or arrow keys on PC (or the left joystick on mobile). The trick is sneaking. Animals hear your footsteps, so tap C to crouch and move slowly. Sprint (Shift) only when you need to reposition fast or escape a charging lion.
Taking the Shot
Once you're in range, right-click to aim down sights (or tap the aim button on mobile). Each animal has a health bar that pops up when you target them. Shotguns work close-range, sniper rifles let you zoom way in for long-distance headshots, and assault rifles are your all-arounder. Hit R to reload—don't get caught empty when a hippo charges you. On mobile, the auto-shoot button lights up when you're aimed at a target, which makes it easier but less tactical.
Earning Currency and Upgrading
Complete missions to earn coins. You'll see the currency counter at the top of the screen. Spend it on new weapons or unlock loot chests in the menu (there's a chest icon in the bottom-right corner). Better guns mean faster kills and access to tougher hunts. The progression loop is straightforward: hunt, earn, upgrade, repeat.
Who is Wildlife: Africa Hunting 3D for?
This is for casual players and younger teens who want a no-pressure shooting game without PvP stress. If you like the idea of a safari but find realistic hunting sims too slow and technical, this hits the sweet spot. It's also great for killing 15 minutes on a school Chromebook or a low-end Android phone. Don't expect deep mechanics or photorealistic graphics—it's all about quick satisfaction and simple objectives.
The Gameplay Vibe
It's chill until it isn't. Most of the time you're wandering orange low-poly grasslands, listening to ambient wind sounds, tracking dots on a radar. Then you fire a shot, the sound echoes, and suddenly every animal within earshot either runs or charges you. The lighting is a bit blown out—especially in the desert areas where everything looks washed out—but the minimalist art style keeps framerates smooth. Audio is basic: gunshots are punchy, animals make generic roars and grunts, and there's no music to speak of. It's meditative in a weird way, like a browser-game version of Deer Hunter from the early 2000s.
Technical Check: Saves & Performance
Your progress—unlocked weapons and currency—saves automatically in your browser's local storage. Just don't clear your cache or play in incognito mode, or you'll lose everything. Performance-wise, this thing runs on a potato. The low-poly assets and simple lighting mean even older laptops and budget smartphones can handle it at 60fps. No stuttering, no downloads, no installs. Hit fullscreen mode for a more immersive experience.
Quick Verdict: Pros & Cons
A solid time-killer if you're into hunting games but don't want to commit to something complex.
- ✅ Pro: Instant action—no tutorials, no cutscenes, just spawn and hunt.
- ✅ Pro: Stealth mechanics actually matter; animals react to sound and movement.
- ❌ Con: Graphics are extremely basic, even for a low-poly game. Asset-flip vibes are strong.
Controls
Responsive and standard for first-person shooters. No awkward delays, though mobile aiming can feel a bit floaty.
- Desktop: WASD to move, Mouse to aim, Right-click to scope, Left-click to shoot, C to crouch, Shift to sprint, R to reload, Spacebar to jump.
- Mobile: Left joystick to move, swipe right side of screen to aim, tap Attack button for auto-fire, dedicated crouch and reload buttons on-screen.
Release Date & Developer
Developed by TRAgames and released on November 13, 2024. It's a Russian-made browser game built in Unity, clearly targeting the casual web gaming crowd.



