Existing players used to logging in with their character name and moo password must signup for a website account.
- Wulf 5m
- Sulfurado 52s
- Thia 50m
- PinkFox 49m
- Hivemind 35s
- Bruhlicious 14m Deine Mutter stinkt nach Erbrochenem und Bier.
- Frozenpizza 2h
- Vanashis 17m
- Pladdicus 1m uh
- Sivartas 1h
- Fay 1m
And 17 more hiding and/or disguised

G String
An indie cyberpunk FPS focused on story and world building

Just found out about this game a little bit ago. It has a very Sindome-like vibe to it, and I think deserves a lot more attention.


In G String, Earth has been polluted to the point of no return, and the rich have abandoned earth to go to Mars and other planets. Your character, Myo Hyori, is unlucky enough to be stuck on Earth, which is now under control of fascist corporations. There's even one corporation called Murdock Air, which has monopolized clean, breathable air. Meanwhile, most of the citizens left on Earth stay in their densely packed apartments all the time with their government issued sexbots, since going outside without a hazmat suit is a death sentence. Some few citizens do join rebel groups though, to fight back against everything that's happening.

I don't wanna get too much into the story, but being built off of the Source Engine, this game plays a lot like Half Life and other old school shooter games. The game is about 10 to 15 hours long, has multiple ways you can navigate the levels to reach your goal, has a very long, 100 page lore document, and was mostly the work of one person for well over a decade, along with a small game studio to help with the software side.

At the moment, G String is $17.99 on Steam.
https://store.steampowered.com/app/1224600/G_String/



Edit: Also the developer is currently working on an improved Ultimate Edition. Woo :)

(Edited by Raven at 12:18 pm on 10/23/2025)

Very mid-90s Source engine vibes for sure.

I like the premise.

I just saw a fantastic explainer yesterday about how the corporations have cornered control over water.

https://www.instagram.com/p/DP045_IjId5/

Water is no longer a resource. It is an asset class controlled by 5 corporations and 2 investment firms.

I suppose it makes logical sense that air will follow at some point.

Here's a nice video about the game :)

https://youtu.be/wJ_DI6PpTBE