Read this if the game doesn't load.

Go Fullscreen

Get to Know About Garbage Man – Time Hacked

You strap on your VR headset and suddenly you’re the Garbage Man, hurtling through warped timelines to scoop up floating junk before it breaks reality. There’s something oddly satisfying about pointing your blaster-vacuum at neon soda cans and dinosaur bones alike, sucking them up in a single, glorious “whoosh.” Along the way, you’ll race against the clock—hence “Time Hacked”—and dodge temporal anomalies that warp the world into glitchy, trippy shapes right when you least expect it.

Gameplay is all about the next wave: each round brings more garbage and trickier enemies, from rogue robots to mutated trash monsters. Your toolkit grows as you go, too, whether it’s a rapid-fire straw gun for point-blank scrapping or a hefty shotgun that blasts entire clumps of debris sky-high. You can upgrade on the fly between waves, tinkering with power-ups that boost vacuum range, increase blast radius or even slow down time just long enough to line up the perfect shot.

Visually, the game leans into a bright, cartoon-y style that makes the strangest environments feel lighthearted. One moment you’re cleaning up a medieval battlefield strewn with goblet fragments, the next you’re in a futuristic city with floating hover-cars leaking radioactive sludge. It never takes itself too seriously—there’s always a quippy, fourth-wall–breaking line ready to pop whenever the action heats up.

What really hooks you, though, is that sweet loop of collecting junk, cashing it in, upgrading gear and diving back into the fray. Sessions can be as short or as marathon as you like, whether you’ve got ten minutes to blast a quick wave or you’re gearing up for an all-night cleaning spree. By the end, you’re both exhausted and itching to see what new oddity Time Hacked throws at your trusty garbage blaster next.