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Lab Havoc

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Description:

Lab Havoc is a physics sandbox game where you build dangerous test setups inside a lab and watch them play out. Each round starts in a small chamber with clone subjects and a set of tools. Your job is to place traps, weapons, and machines in smart spots, then start the test and see what happens.



The main loop is simple. Build a setup, run the test, earn points, and change things for the next round. But the fun comes from how different each setup can be. A basic room with one saw and one launcher can work. Or it can fail badly. Small changes in angle, spacing, and timing can turn a weak setup into a huge chain reaction.



How the gameplay works


You place tools around the room before the test begins. These can be simple hazards or bigger weapons that hit harder and cause more chaos. Once the subject enters the room, your setup starts doing its job. Some traps hit fast. Others push, burn, launch, or trap targets so the next part of the setup can finish the job.



The goal is not just damage. Good runs come from building setups where each piece works with the next one. A laser can push a target into a saw. A launcher can throw it into explosives. The best results come from chaining effects together instead of dropping strong weapons everywhere and hoping it works.



What makes it fun



  • Physics-based results make every test feel a little different.

  • Trap combos reward smart placement over random chaos.

  • Score and upgrades give you better tools as runs improve.

  • Replay value stays strong because small changes can lead to very different outcomes.



Progress and replay


As you score more, you unlock stronger tools and more ways to build. Early rounds are simple and mostly about learning how objects move and react. Later runs get messier and more creative as better gear opens up more combo options. That steady unlock system keeps the game moving without changing the core idea.



Lab Havoc works best as a test-and-repeat game. You try an idea, watch where it fails, then fix one part and run it again. It is less about speed and more about building something that works better every time. If you like browser games built around physics, chain reactions, and trial-and-error setups, this one does that well.



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Interact: Left Click
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