Midnight Protocol
A keyboard-only hacking RPG where every keystroke feels deliberate and the mystery of who doxxed you unravels one cracked server at a time.
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About Midnight Protocol
Midnight Protocol is a tactical, narrative-driven RPG about hacking, paranoia, and the kind of digital underworld that feels entirely plausible at 2am. You play a hacker who has been doxxed - your real identity exposed online - and the entire game is structured around tracing that breach back to its source. The hook is strong and personal, and LuGus Studios commits to it with writing that rewards attention. This is not a power fantasy about omnipotent hackers. It is a slow, methodical thriller where information is currency and trust is a liability. The headline mechanic is the keyboard-only control scheme, and it genuinely changes how the game feels. You navigate menus, execute commands, and manage your tools entirely through typed inputs and hotkeys. At first it reads as a gimmick, but within a few hours it creates a tactile immersion that mouse-driven interfaces rarely achieve. You feel like you are actually operating a terminal rather than clicking through a UI. The hacking itself is turn-based and strategic - you queue programs, monitor heat levels, and sequence your intrusions carefully. Security systems escalate, countermeasures adapt, and rushing gets you burned. Build variety matters here: different software loadouts suit different playstyles, whether you prefer brute-force tools or subtle trace-avoidance approaches. The narrative is where the game earns its Very Positive Steam score. The writing is tighter than most indie RPGs in this price range, with characters who have actual personalities and a central mystery that sustains momentum without cheap twists. Dialogue choices carry weight - relationships shift, information gates open or close, and some threads only resolve on a second playthrough when you spot what you missed. It is not BG3-length, but the writing rewards re-reads. The worldbuilding is delivered almost entirely through text logs, chat transcripts, and intercepted files, which suits the hacking premise perfectly and avoids the filler-quest trap that drags down so many narrative RPGs. Where the game has limits: it is relatively short for an RPG (most players finish in eight to twelve hours), and the tactical depth, while satisfying, does not have the ceiling of a dedicated strategy title. Players who want sprawling skill trees or open-world exploration will hit a wall quickly. The keyboard-only controls, for all their charm, can feel obtuse in the early hours before muscle memory sets in, and the tutorial does not always communicate edge-case mechanics clearly. If you bounce off the interface in the first session, give it one more - it clicks, and once it does, the pacing becomes genuinely propulsive. For RPG players who care more about atmosphere, sharp writing, and systems that serve the story rather than pad it out, Midnight Protocol delivers something distinctly its own. The doxxing premise feels grounded, the hacking mechanics are coherent rather than hand-wavy, and the mystery has enough layers to justify a second run. It is the kind of game Iceberg Interactive quietly publishes that a certain audience discovers, loves, and tells exactly three other people about. Monika, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- LuGus Studios
- Publisher
- Iceberg Interactive
- Release Date
- Oct 13, 2021