Pixel · Horror Arcade Browser May 17, 2026

Fun Clicker Review

A pixel-horror arcade hub with five games that don't act like clickers.

8/10
Worth It

Fun Clicker is not one game. It's a hub of five free pixel-horror games on a single domain — Scratch by Voidder, Scare Maze, Hold the Button, Days Since Incident, and Don't Press The Button. None of them are clickers in the idle/incremental sense the name suggests. All five share a dark, retro-arcade aesthetic and pretend to be lighter than they actually are. One of the more cohesively-themed free game collections on the browser, at 8.0/10 — Worth It.

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What Is It?

Fun Clicker is a curated hub of five free browser games hosted at funclicker.com. The site presents itself as a casual clicker arcade — bright fonts, leaderboard ribbons, daily challenges — and then the actual games turn out to lean psychological-horror. The five titles are: Fun Clicker — Scratch by Voidder (a clicker that becomes psychological horror across staged endings), Scare Maze (top-down horror navigation), Hold the Button (endurance challenge with a twist), Days Since Incident (patience-based countdown), and Don't Press the Button (one-button puzzle with branching responses).

All five games are free, browser-native, no account required. Leaderboards run on every game and live stats update in real time across the site. The hub format is unusual for free browser games — most game portals either host hundreds of low-effort titles or one polished standalone. Fun Clicker sits in between: a small curated collection where each game gets development attention rather than spreading thin.

The aesthetic is consistent across all five games: dark backgrounds, pixel/CRT styling, monospace type. Each game tweaks the colour palette but the visual language is unified — closer to an arcade machine roster than a portal.

Gameplay

Each game uses simple inputs — single-click, single-press, or short keystroke patterns. The depth comes from how each game subverts player expectations. Scratch by Voidder starts as a benign click-to-reveal mechanic and gradually exposes its horror layer through staged endings the player only sees by playing through. Don't Press The Button is a one-button puzzle with a voice that addresses the player by browser-stored name and has no proper ending state — players figure out the meta-puzzle or they don't.

Hold the Button is the most arcade-feeling of the five — an endurance challenge that tracks the longest single button-hold. The leaderboard runs to genuine hours of held time on the global top-ten. Days Since Incident is a slower piece — a countdown timer game that rewards patience and punishes attention loss. Scare Maze is the most conventional: navigate a top-down maze, avoid the things in the dark, reach the exit.

Cross-game progression doesn't exist — each title has its own leaderboard and stats. What you do share across games is the look and the tone. The hub treats horror as a design vocabulary rather than a marketing hook, which is the difference between a horror game and a game with horror sprinkled on.

Performance is good across all five. None require heavy assets or aggressive frame rates. The site is COPPA-compliant and frames the audience as roughly 11–15, which lands oddly given the tone — these games are designed for an age bracket that has seen scarier YouTube videos this week.

Pros

  • Five distinct games, all free, all genuinely different from each other
  • Cohesive aesthetic across the entire collection — feels curated, not aggregated
  • Don't Press The Button uses real browser-stored data for personalisation — uncomfortably effective
  • Scratch by Voidder's staged endings reward replaying — there's actual hidden content
  • Leaderboards work on every game, no signup required to submit
  • Mobile and desktop both supported, with desktop the better choice for endurance games

Cons

  • The 'clicker' branding is misleading — none of these are idle/incremental games
  • Horror tone vs. younger audience target reads as a marketing mismatch
  • Cross-game progression doesn't exist — each game is its own silo
  • Scare Maze is the weakest of the five and pulls average review weight down
  • Site nav doesn't make game order or recommended-first-play obvious

Tips & Tricks

  1. Start with Don't Press The Button. It's the strongest of the five and sets the tone for what the hub is actually doing. Playing it first calibrates expectations for the others.
  2. Scratch by Voidder rewards multiple playthroughs. The first ending isn't the only ending. The clicker mechanic has staged branches based on what you've clicked, how long you've played, and how many times you've revisited.
  3. Hold the Button is desktop-only for serious runs. Holding a key for hours is doable on a keyboard with one finger. Mobile touch holds are exhausting and the slightest finger lift breaks the streak.
  4. Days Since Incident is a passive-window game. Open it in a background tab and check in occasionally. Trying to actively watch the countdown will get you nowhere — the design wants ambient attention.
  5. Scare Maze is the warm-up game. Don't spend more than 20 minutes on it. The other four are more interesting.
  6. Check the live stats counters between games. The hub shows real-time site-wide activity — useful for figuring out which games are getting played right now and whether leaderboards are active.
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8/10
Worth It

Fun Clicker is a small, cohesive hub of five free pixel-horror browser games that punch well above their genre. Don't Press The Button and Scratch by Voidder are genuinely strong; Hold the Button and Days Since Incident are clever exercises in attention design; Scare Maze is the weakest but adequate. The clicker branding undersells what's actually on offer.

FAQ

Is Fun Clicker free?

Yes. All five games on funclicker.com are completely free. No account required, no downloads, no in-app purchases.

How many games are on Fun Clicker?

Five: Scratch by Voidder, Scare Maze, Hold the Button, Days Since Incident, and Don't Press The Button.

Is Fun Clicker safe for kids?

The site is COPPA-compliant and frames its audience as around 11–15. Tonally, the games lean psychological horror — younger or sensitive players may find them unsettling. None contain graphic content or explicit horror imagery.

What's the best game on Fun Clicker?

Don't Press The Button is the strongest single game in the hub. Scratch by Voidder has the most replay value due to its branching endings.

Does Fun Clicker have leaderboards?

Yes, every game has its own leaderboard. Stats are tracked site-wide and updated live.

Are these idle or incremental clicker games?

No, despite the name. None of the five games are clickers in the Cookie Clicker sense. The 'clicker' branding refers to the single-input style rather than the genre.

Does Fun Clicker work on mobile?

Yes, the site is mobile-responsive. Some games (Hold the Button) play significantly better on desktop because the input requires sustained key holds.

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