Text-based hacking with real player impact
hackmud by Drizzly Bear is a multiplayer, text-based hacking simulator where the keyboard is your gateway to a living cyberpunk world. Combining coding mechanics, economic strategy, and player-driven storytelling, it offers an experience that feels more like inhabiting a digital underground than playing a conventional game.
Player-crafted stories in a cyberpunk terminal
At its core, hackmud places you in a persistent online sandbox where every interaction is typed, not clicked. Commands and scripts are your tools, allowing you to navigate the world, automate processes, and engage with a thriving player-driven economy. There’s no fixed storyline—players forge their own paths by collaborating, competing, or trading resources. Alliances, rivalries, and scripted tools shape not only your personal journey but also the shared world around you.
The retro terminal interface channels the aesthetic of ’90s hacker films, paired with an atmospheric soundtrack by Lena Raine and Ryan Ike. It’s minimalist by design, letting the text and your own imagination set the scene. While this stripped-down style favors depth over visual flash, it can be a hurdle for those expecting traditional graphics. The steep learning curve, especially for those new to programming concepts, demands patience—but rewards perseverance with a sense of agency few games can match.
Final thoughts
hackmud is a niche but remarkably deep experience for players who value creativity, problem-solving, and community-driven worlds. Its complexity won’t appeal to everyone, but for those who embrace its text-driven nature and scripting challenges, it offers an endlessly evolving playground.








