Meaningless Random Numbers pairs incremental gameplay with horror atmosphere in a novel way. The game places you in front of a die that costs money to roll but generates returns, creating the core loop of gambling-style progression. Roll higher numbers and you earn cash and experience points. Add more dice to the pool. Expand operations. Make more money.
The catch. God watches your every action. The game judges you morally for your decisions, including murder, which apparently factors into the cosmic scoreboard. Meanwhile, you're also indebted to the devil for several hundred dollars, forcing an uncomfortable choice between divine judgment and demonic debt collection.
This indie horror title blends the compulsive reward loops of incremental games with existential dread. The premise works because it subverts expectations. Incremental games normally celebrate optimization and growth without friction. Meaningless Random Numbers weaponizes that same dopamine cycle against moral stakes. Every roll carries weight beyond the numbers.
The game's visual presentation reinforces the horror. A single die on screen. Minimal UI. Slow creeping dread as you realize the system doesn't care about your ethics. God's judgment meter fills. The devil's debt grows. Roll again anyway.
This approach echoes games like Papers Please or Disco Elysium, where mechanical systems force uncomfortable roleplaying decisions. You're not just grinding for numbers. You're complicit in actions that the game tracks and punishes.
Meaningless Random Numbers releases into a space where incremental games have become mainstream but often sterile. Cookie Clicker proved the genre's viability. Since then, most incrementals chase scale and prestige systems. Few lean into horror or moral consequence. This title fills that gap by asking whether the satisfaction of optimization survives when God is watching and the devil is owed payment.
The game arrives on PC and asks a simple question. How far
