
Loading critic reviews...
Finding live streams...
Platinum White drops you into a desolate world where time is both enemy and deadline. You have seven minutes and fifty-nine seconds to piece together fragments of your past by moving freely through an open landscape or lingering in one place to parse cryptic details. The game’s minimal controls let you focus on uncovering why you’re here and why the environment feels unnervingly familiar. Every decision matters as the clock ticks toward an inevitable encounter with the Platinum White, a presence that ends your session regardless of progress. What lingers after the timer hits zero is the game’s eerie atmosphere and the way it toys with memory. Without clear tutorials or objectives, you’re left to interpret environmental clues and shifting perspectives, creating a puzzle that feels more like a mood than a challenge. Early testers praise its ability to evoke discomfort and curiosity in equal measure, though the lack of resolution may frustrate some. It’s a short but unsettling experience that sticks around long after you leave.
You wake up to the feeling that you’ve been here before. You know that you can’t trust your feelings. You also know that you don’t have much time.
Game Modes
Single player
Finding deals...
Loading achievements...
Finding similar games...
Checking Bluesky...