Read this if the game doesn't load.

Go Fullscreen

Learn About the Game Timebot

Every time you boot up Timebot, you’re greeted by this plucky little robot that somehow feels like an old friend despite only existing in pixels. You guide this tiny hero through a series of clockwork corridors and shiny gears, marveling at how the game turns time itself into the biggest puzzle. It’s never just a matter of getting from point A to point B—each level feels like a clever brain teaser wrapped up in a sci-fi fable where every tick and tock matters.

What really hooks you is the way Timebot lets you manipulate past and future versions of yourself. Press a button and watch as a ghostly clone from your previous run helps you hold down switches or march in perfect sync to unlock a door. Juggling these echoes of your own actions becomes second nature, and you start to think in loops—always planning three steps ahead, always keeping an eye on what’s already happened. It’s a rush when you finally nail a sequence that you’ve been replaying a dozen times, and that feeling of triumph never really gets old.

Visually, Timebot feels like it was plucked from an era when pixel art ruled, yet somehow it still looks fresh. Warm hues of brass and copper dominate the backgrounds, while little sparks fly when you’re close to solving a particularly tricky time conundrum. The soundtrack is this perfect blend of chiptune nostalgia and ambient hum, calming you when you’re stuck and ramping up just enough when you almost taste victory. Everything about its presentation feels lovingly handcrafted.

By the time you’ve zipped through the final chapter, you’ll find yourself missing that little bot and the mind-bending stunts you pulled together. It’s the kind of game that stays with you on the subway or when you’re washing dishes—your brain keeps riffing on that one puzzle you couldn’t quite crack. If you’re into clever puzzles and charming robo-sidekicks, Timebot absolutely deserves a few hours of your attention.