Blanket Fort

Blanket Fort

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About Blanket Fort

Blanket Fort is an indie adventure simulator with horror elements from Stingray Studios. Released in October 2025 for PC, it tasks you with navigating a shifting maze of blankets and pillows in first-person. The goal: help plush toys resolve their issues while avoiding dangerous encounters. The game leans into cozy aesthetics but uses claustrophobic level design and sudden scares to create tension. It’s a short, experimental experience blending exploration with stealth, where misplaced steps or a jealous teddy can lead to failure. Best suited for fans of low-stakes horror and quirky puzzles.

Gameplay

You move through a dynamic blanket fort, dodging obstacles like hanging fabric and hidden drop zones. Each session feels like solving a spatial puzzle, as pathways rearrange to block progress or trap you. Plushies act as objectives, you might retrieve a lost button or untangle a yarn ball, but interacting with them risks alerting predators. Controls prioritize movement and quick reflexes for dodging threats. The first-person perspective amplifies tension, especially when tight spaces close in or shadows chase you. Sessions last 30, 60 minutes, balancing curiosity with panic as the maze grows more unstable.

What Players Think

Blanket Fort holds a 7.8 rating on PlayPile, with 83% of players finishing the game. Average playtime is 4.5 hours, and 68% of completers hit 100% achievements. Community moods lean spooky (72%) and tense (65%), with 43% calling it “hilariously terrifying.” Critic reviews highlight its “clever use of confined spaces” but note inconsistent pacing. One user wrote, “It’s like being trapped in a toddler’s playroom with a monster.” While polarizing, the game’s charm and short length earn it a 7.4 critic score.

PlayPile's Take

Blanket Fort is a niche pick for fans of experimental horror and cozy aesthetics. At $19.99, it’s a low-risk buy for its 5-hour runtime and inventive design. The 12 achievements add replayability, but the game’s biggest flaw is its brevity. If you enjoy games like Five Nights at Freddy’s or The Forest but want something lighter, this one’s worth a try. Avoid if you prefer deep narratives or polished mechanics.

Game Modes

Single player

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