
Hell doesn't clean itself. But you do.
You've been assigned to the worst job in the afterlife. Hell has a rot problem. An encroaching corruption called The Creep is swallowing neglected zones whole, bodies are piling up faster than anyone can count, and nobody else is going to deal with it.
That's where you come in.
Hell Cleaners is a first-person automation game about reclaiming territory from neglect and rot. You vacuum demon bodies, feed them into the Grinder, process their limbs into fuel, and slowly build a self-sustaining operation that takes over the zone piece by piece. The goal isn't just to clean. It's to build something that cleans itself.
Features:
Vacuum everything in sight. Your living suction weapon is your primary tool, your weapon, and your lifeline.
Bodies go to the Grinder. Limbs fuel the Purifier. Souls buy upgrades. Keep the machine fed.
Deploy the Doombas, small autonomous collector units that are, by design, kind of stupid. Stack enough of them and it stops mattering.
Push back The Creep, unlock new areas, and scale your operation into something that probably violates several underworld regulations.
Then step back and watch it run without you. That's the whole point.
Cleaning hell is messy, loud, and industrial. It's not a mop. It's a grinder.