
33

Planet Buster

Tetrix Online

Space Plan

Red Face Horror

Retro Rush

Trees Hate You

CaptchaWare

Office Fury

Astro Tycoon

Lab Havoc

Drift Rush

Fish Quest

Geometry Dash SubZero

Geometry Dash Bloodbath

Wurst Dash

Vex X3M 3

Color Wave

Fish Quest

Farting Flight

Tap Brawl

Drift Rush

Long Leg Master

Superwave Test

Space Dash

Rooster Road

Arcade Glide

Fortress Clash

Critter Neon Wave Challenge

Track Dash

Color Surfer

Sausage Battle

Hyper Wave Trial

Ship Smasher

Sky Dart

Retro Rush

Lab Havoc
Cheat or Repeat is a tense classroom stealth simulation where you play a desperate student trying to pass an exam… by cheating. Every move is watched, every second matters, and one mistake can get you caught instantly.
Unlike many typical stealth games that rely on movement and combat, this one focuses on micro-actions, timing, and attention management, making it feel more like a psychological survival test than a traditional game.
Goal: Find answers and submit them without raising suspicion
Core Loop: Peek → Observe → React → Answer
Controls:
1. Don’t max out your “phone time” early
The biggest mistake is overusing the phone at the start. Suspicion builds faster than you think. Use short bursts (1–2 seconds), then stop. Treat it like a cooldown system.
2. Watch the teacher’s pause moments
The teacher doesn’t just walk randomly — there are micro-pauses before turning. That’s your safest window to check the phone. Most players miss this pattern.
3. Fake confidence with fast answers
Hesitating too long on answers actually increases suspicion indirectly. Once you peek, commit quickly — slow reactions look unnatural.
4. Audio cues matter more than visuals
There are moments when you won’t see danger, but you’ll hear it first. Always prioritize sound over visuals — switching late by even half a second can fail the run.
5. Use classmates as dynamic cover (not static)
Don’t rely on sitting still behind one student. Shift your angle slightly using camera movement — this reduces detection probability during inspections.
After playing multiple rounds, the game stands out for how mentally exhausting (in a good way) it becomes. It’s not about reflex alone — it’s about decision timing under stress.
Compared to similar stealth or reaction-based games, Cheat or Repeat feels more like a mix between:
Unlike many arcade reflex games, this one punishes impatience more than slow reactions.