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LAN Party Adventures is a puzzle-heavy indie simulator set in a chaotic tech environment. Developed by LEAP Game Studios and released in 2025, it casts you as someone tasked with preparing a LAN party at a struggling game store while investigating your missing friend Pedro. The game blends tech troubleshooting, connecting cables, installing software, with light mystery elements. It’s a single-player PC game that leans into the niche appeal of LAN culture, offering a mix of problem-solving and character-driven storytelling. The vibe is equal parts nostalgic and frantic, with a focus on logistics over action.
You spend most sessions juggling hardware setup and software troubleshooting. Each puzzle involves dragging cables, configuring routers, or debugging code snippets, often with time limits or resource constraints. The store layout shifts randomly, forcing you to adapt to new obstacles. Between tasks, you uncover Pedro’s disappearance via emails, chat logs, and cryptic notes hidden in tech manuals. Controls are clunky at first but streamline as you learn shortcuts. A typical hour might involve resolving a Wi-Fi outage, deciphering a corrupted file, and dodging a mischievous cat loose in the server room. Progress hinges on balancing efficiency with story clues.
Community rating is 4.2/5, with critics averaging 88/100. Completion rate is 72%, and average playthroughs last 12h 45m. Moods tracked: curious (88%), determined (65%), confused (42%). Players praise the “oddly satisfying cable-juggling” (u/RouterRanger) but note the steep learning curve. One review says, “It’s like IT support in a haunted house.” Achievements (42 in total) focus on efficiency benchmarks, with 32% of players unlocking over half. The game’s niche appeal shows in playtime variance: some quit early, others max out 40+ hours.
LAN Party Adventures works best for fans of methodical simulators and tech geeks. At $29.99, it offers value for its 13-hour average runtime, though the 28% drop-off rate suggests it’s not for everyone. The 42 achievements reward patience but don’t add depth. If you’ve ever spent hours untangling Ethernet cables and enjoy meta-puzzles in logs, this is your game. Skip if you want fast action or polished controls. The mystery subplot is clever but underdeveloped.
Game Modes
Single player
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