
Paint the bunny man — a hide-and-seek where you blend in like a chameleon.
The rules are simple. Split into the Seeker team and the Hider team and play hide-and-seek. The Seekers win if they find everyone before time runs out.
The way you hide is a little special. You're a pure-white bunny man — not a speck of color on you, which makes you the perfect canvas. Bunnies aren't natural-born hiders, but you'll read the environment like a chameleon and paint yourself a coat of camouflage:
Sample: pull colors straight off the objects around you
Light: match the direction of the light so your highlights and shadows fall in the right places
Material: tune metalness, roughness, and transparency/refraction until you look like plastic, like tile, like glass, like a pool of water
Where you hide, the pose you strike, and above all how precisely you dial in your materials — that's what fools the Seekers' eyes. Pull off a mimicry that would make a real chameleon do a double-take, and bury this little white bunny in a scene full of clutter.
Every map has its own "material trap," each one drilling a different lighting skill:
Toy World: plastic, plush, tin, and building blocks all piled together — the busiest materials and the loudest colors. The easiest map to start on. (One bunny man tucked into a wall of stuffed animals — who's going to spot it?)
Museum: hard spotlights, black backgrounds, hard shadows. Get your shadow direction even slightly wrong and you're made — your shadow is your biggest tell.
Neon Funfair: after dark, colored lights wash everything in a tint — and the lights flicker and shift color. Lock in one color and you'll be wrong half the time.
Backrooms Pool: endless tile and still water, eerily empty. Transmission, refraction, underwater caustics, and wet-floor reflections all tested at once — the ceiling for water-based materials.
(Every map also hides a "looks perfect, actually a death trap" spot — feeling lucky?)
Of course you can play with friends, but you can also play with people you don't know. (Create a server that isn't set to private, and anyone can join freely.) Streamers can easily host viewer-participation games. The maximum number of players depends on the host's network environment.