Compare Cyber Manhunt prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Aluba Van+. Published by Aluba Van+. Released on 2/2/2021. Available on PC, Mac. Genres: Indie, RPG, Simulation.

If Papers, Please made you uncomfortable about surveillance capitalism, Cyber Manhunt will make you feel like you built it - five chapters of social-engineering puzzles with a moral hangover at the end.

I went in expecting a terminal-green Hacknet clone and came out having spent several hours combing fake social media timelines, cracking passwords, and impersonating people over in-game phone calls. Cyber Manhunt is not about typing commands into a shell. It is closer to Orwell: Keeping an Eye On You in structure - a simulated operating system desktop where you open a browser, a database, a crack tool, a phishing module, and a hacking application to raid targets' phones, and you chain the output of each tool to feed the next. The loop is: find a username on a fake search engine, run it through the database, generate a likely password with the crack app, log into their Toothbook or email account, then harvest fresh breadcrumbs to repeat the cycle. It is methodical rather than cinematic, and that deliberate pace is exactly the point. The five-chapter story puts you inside Titan Corporation as a rookie hacker-for-hire. Each chapter focuses on a different social issue - cyber violence, doxxing, privacy breaches - drawn from real-world incident reports that the small Aluba Studio team researched alongside actual social engineering literature. The moral weight lands unevenly. Your choices branch the dialogue and nudge the plot, but a handful of decisions feel cosmetic: wrong answers at deduction screens simply loop until you find the correct one, which deflates the sense of consequence. A late-game puzzle in chapter five that breaks the fourth wall using a phone dialer is the kind of lateral thinking moment that reminds you this team had ambition beyond its budget. The presentation is the honest weak spot. The UI borrows the visual language of a Mac-style desktop and it works well enough on PC, but reports from Mac players flag genuine input-mapping bugs that can make buttons nearly unreachable. The English translation carries its rough edges too - grammar stumbles that do not break comprehension but do chip at immersion during emotionally loaded scenes. Mouse-hover clue gathering can feel imprecise, and some chapters drop guidance at exactly the moment puzzles get their sharpest teeth, which sends players into trial-and-error spirals the design did not intend. Think of it as a first-game roughness from a studio of eight people, not a broken product. For the audience asking whether this is approachable: yes, without reservation. There are no build orders, no resource timers, no fail states tied to combat. If you can navigate a web browser and read carefully, you have all the skills the game requires. The fantasy of being a methodical OSINT investigator - cross-referencing a database hit against a social profile against a cracked inbox - is executed with enough fidelity that players who enjoyed Searching or Who Am I: No System Is Safe as films will find the interactive version satisfying. The story clocks in short by grand-strategy standards, easily finished in a single sitting or two, which makes the tight scope appropriate rather than disappointing. Cyber Manhunt is the kind of debut title that earns goodwill by taking its subject seriously. It is not polished to a mirror finish, the Mac version needs caution, and the branching choices need more structural courage. But the core loop of piecing together a target's digital life from fragments - a username here, a leaked photo there, a phishing conversation that requires you to stay in character - delivers something most hacking games only gesture at. If the sequel exists and is better, credit goes to the foundation this one laid. Diego, Scout Team

Cyber Manhunt
IndieRPGSimulation

Cyber Manhunt

Feb 2, 2021Aluba Van+
GamerScout Says

If Papers, Please made you uncomfortable about surveillance capitalism, Cyber Manhunt will make you feel like you built it - five chapters of social-engineering puzzles with a moral hangover at the end.

PCMac
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Screenshots & Media

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About Cyber Manhunt

I went in expecting a terminal-green Hacknet clone and came out having spent several hours combing fake social media timelines, cracking passwords, and impersonating people over in-game phone calls. Cyber Manhunt is not about typing commands into a shell. It is closer to Orwell: Keeping an Eye On You in structure - a simulated operating system desktop where you open a browser, a database, a crack tool, a phishing module, and a hacking application to raid targets' phones, and you chain the output of each tool to feed the next. The loop is: find a username on a fake search engine, run it through the database, generate a likely password with the crack app, log into their Toothbook or email account, then harvest fresh breadcrumbs to repeat the cycle. It is methodical rather than cinematic, and that deliberate pace is exactly the point. The five-chapter story puts you inside Titan Corporation as a rookie hacker-for-hire. Each chapter focuses on a different social issue - cyber violence, doxxing, privacy breaches - drawn from real-world incident reports that the small Aluba Studio team researched alongside actual social engineering literature. The moral weight lands unevenly. Your choices branch the dialogue and nudge the plot, but a handful of decisions feel cosmetic: wrong answers at deduction screens simply loop until you find the correct one, which deflates the sense of consequence. A late-game puzzle in chapter five that breaks the fourth wall using a phone dialer is the kind of lateral thinking moment that reminds you this team had ambition beyond its budget. The presentation is the honest weak spot. The UI borrows the visual language of a Mac-style desktop and it works well enough on PC, but reports from Mac players flag genuine input-mapping bugs that can make buttons nearly unreachable. The English translation carries its rough edges too - grammar stumbles that do not break comprehension but do chip at immersion during emotionally loaded scenes. Mouse-hover clue gathering can feel imprecise, and some chapters drop guidance at exactly the moment puzzles get their sharpest teeth, which sends players into trial-and-error spirals the design did not intend. Think of it as a first-game roughness from a studio of eight people, not a broken product. For the audience asking whether this is approachable: yes, without reservation. There are no build orders, no resource timers, no fail states tied to combat. If you can navigate a web browser and read carefully, you have all the skills the game requires. The fantasy of being a methodical OSINT investigator - cross-referencing a database hit against a social profile against a cracked inbox - is executed with enough fidelity that players who enjoyed Searching or Who Am I: No System Is Safe as films will find the interactive version satisfying. The story clocks in short by grand-strategy standards, easily finished in a single sitting or two, which makes the tight scope appropriate rather than disappointing. Cyber Manhunt is the kind of debut title that earns goodwill by taking its subject seriously. It is not polished to a mirror finish, the Mac version needs caution, and the branching choices need more structural courage. But the core loop of piecing together a target's digital life from fragments - a username here, a leaked photo there, a phishing conversation that requires you to stay in character - delivers something most hacking games only gesture at. If the sequel exists and is better, credit goes to the foundation this one laid. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-5Social EngineeringOSINT SimulationMoral ChoicesInvestigation PuzzlesHacking SimLinear NarrativeShort PlaytimeEthical Dilemma

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Gold

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable. Runs great on Linux after minor tweaks. Based on 7 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7/8/10
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
3 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GT 610
Processor
Intel(R) Core(TM) i3-3220
Sound Card
100% DirectX 9.0c compatible sound card

Recommended

OS
Windows 7/8/10
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
3 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GT 630
Processor
Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-3470
Sound Card
100% DirectX 9.0c compatible sound card

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Game Info

Developer
Aluba Van+
Publisher
Aluba Van+
Release Date
Feb 2, 2021

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Price History

2026-06-103.20(lowest)

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What platforms is Cyber Manhunt available on?

Cyber Manhunt is available on PC, Mac.

When was Cyber Manhunt released?

Cyber Manhunt was released on 2 February 2021.

Who developed Cyber Manhunt?

Cyber Manhunt was developed by Aluba Van+.