Read this if the game doesn't load.

Go Fullscreen

Learn About the Game Haunt the House Hacked

It feels strangely satisfying to drift through the rooms of a house in Haunt the House Hacked, nudging books off shelves and rattling chandeliers to spook the unsuspecting visitors. You’re this cheeky little ghost with an appetite for mischief, and your goal is simple: scare everyone out before the sun comes up. The game hooks you right away with its snappy pixel-art style and a soundtrack that somehow makes creaking floorboards sound downright playful.

As you float into each new room, you get this curious urge to poke at every object—turn the paintings so they stare back, flick the light switch on and off, and even send portraits tilting on the wall. The hacked version cranks up the fun by giving you extra powers and wacky visual effects; one minute you’re whipping up a mini thunderstorm inside a grand ballroom, the next you’re making the furniture dance like its life depends on it. It never gets old watching your invisible influence ramp up the tension until the poor guests bolt for the exit.

Controls are so straightforward you can almost play with one hand. A simple tap or drag triggers your haunting hijinks, and the game’s pacing nudges you toward experimenting. There’s this lovely feedback loop where every shriek or footstep you chase away earns you a little progress bar point, pushing you to discover the coolest combo scares. Before you know it, you’re sidling across haunted pianos and possessed teacups, giggling at the chaos you’ve unleashed.

Even though it’s just you against a handful of tiny digital folks, Haunt the House Hacked feels surprisingly cozy—like friendly paranormal playtime. It’s goofy, it’s charming, and it never takes itself too seriously. Whether you’re looking to kill a few minutes or see how elaborate a ghostly revolt you can stage, this one’s a delightfully sneaky turn-based scare fest.