Is A Dark Room an idle game?
Yes. It uses idle resource loops, but it also has exploration and story choices.
Strategy and long-session games
A Dark Room is an open-source idle adventure that starts small and slowly opens up.
Regional page
This Canada page keeps A Dark Room close to the searches Canadian desktop players use. Start with a fire, then let a quiet world unfold. The game stays browser based, with no installer or launcher.
Quick answer
A Dark Room is a text-based idle adventure that starts with a fire and slowly opens into resource management, exploration, and story. It rewards patience. Click available actions, read what changes, and build enough supplies before pushing into the next area.
How to play
Early game
A Dark Room is slow on purpose. The first screen looks almost empty, but each new action changes what the game expects from you. Pay attention to new buttons and short status lines.
The safest early plan is to keep resources moving. Gather wood, build what the game makes available, and wait until your supply flow feels stable before spending everything on the newest option.
Long sessions
This is the longest-session game in the PCder shelf. It does not need fast input, so players tend to leave it open, check progress, and come back when a new option appears.
That slower pace is also why the page needs a clear guide. New players can mistake the quiet start for a broken game. It is not broken. It is waiting for small decisions to add up.
Common questions
Yes. It uses idle resource loops, but it also has exploration and story choices.
You can play for a long session, but the game is better when you let progress build over time.
No. PCder embeds a static browser version.
Start with the fire, gather basic resources, and read each new line of text before spending supplies.
The slow start teaches the resource loop. New actions appear as the room changes and your supply base grows.
Yes. The Canada page keeps A Dark Room in a desktop browser format with no installer, clear controls, and source notes. A school, office, or managed network may still block access.