131

Stick Hero RPG

Astro Tycoon

Christmas Factory

Wacky Steps

Wave Rider

Fireboy and Watergirl

TB World

FNAF Help Wanted 2

Yume Nikki

2048 Rogue

Turnip Boy Robs a Bank

Sprunki Angler Durple

Dead Strike

Incredibox Twittergram

Sprunkful

Sprunki

Sprunki Retake
Sprunki Phase 5

Escape Tsunami Brainrots Online

Wave Rider

Bottle Hop

Ragdoll Flip

Geometry Dash

Sprunki Wenda Treatment

Sprunki Phase 3
Sprunki Phase 4

Subway Surfers

Sprunki 2026

Sprunked

Sprunki Phase 6

Sprunki Angler Durple

Sprunki Phase 9

Sprunki OC Real

LoveMoney

Sprunki Savior Treatment
Sprunki Phase 1

Sprunki Infected

Sprunki Dandy's World

Escape Road
Sprunki 2018 brings the classic sound-mixing chaos back in a way that feels both retro and refreshingly weird. The moment you step in, you’re dropped into a small, lively stage where each character reacts differently to your taps, drags, and drops. It’s the kind of game you open “for a minute,” only to realize you’ve been locked into its rhythm for much longer. Sprunki 2018 keeps things simple, colorful, and playful—just enough to make you want to experiment without overthinking anything.

Click to select characters, items, and panels. Drag them onto the scene to activate their sounds. Layer them however you want—there’s no wrong combination. Remove or replace pieces anytime to shift the whole vibe of your track.
Tap characters to trigger sounds and swipe to place or move items. Everything is designed to respond quickly, so you can remix on the go without fighting the controls.
The fun comes from building a rhythm that slowly snowballs into something unexpectedly catchy. Each piece you add changes the personality of the soundscape, so you’ll find yourself nudging things around just to see what happens.
Sprunki 2018 has that “let me try one more combo” pull. The reactions are immediate, and the characters give just enough feedback—visual and audio—to make every tiny change feel rewarding. Once you get into the groove, there’s this satisfying moment when the whole board syncs up and becomes a track you didn’t plan but somehow created.
It also feels good to mess up. If you overload the board or drop in a piece that completely ruins the pattern, the resulting chaos is still funny. The game doesn’t punish experimentation; it thrives on it.