You begin to notice patterns . The same businessman passes the same corner every 90 seconds. The subway train arrives but never opens its doors. The sky cycles through day/night in 8-minute loops, but shadows don’t move. You observe a police officer unaware that the “missing person” photo on his phone is you —taken from behind, in the same clothes you’re wearing.
Mr. Unaware has remained silent on future updates, but the “v36a” numbering hints at a long, obsessive development cycle. Some believe the “Basic” tag is ironic—that the game is complete as is, and adding more mechanics would ruin the fragile, voyeuristic tension. Unaware in the City - v36a Basic is not for everyone. It has no goals, no rewards, no save system (exiting resets all observations). It is a walking simulator stripped of even the simulation. But for those who sit on that bench, press “Observe,” and let the city’s unspoken dread seep in, it becomes unforgettable. Unaware in the City -v36a Basic- By Mr. Unaware...
The doppelgänger does not move. But every time you observe another NPC afterward, the text now ends with the same phrase: “And you are unaware of what is now behind you.” You begin to notice patterns
Mr. Unaware has created not a game about being unaware, but a tool for becoming aware—of the limits of empathy, the silence of crowds, and the terrifying possibility that in someone else’s story, you are just another NPC who never looks closely enough. The sky cycles through day/night in 8-minute loops,
After approximately 40 minutes of real-time observation, a soft glitch occurs. The ambient city noise cuts out. A single new NPC appears: a figure identical to your character, standing perfectly still in the center of the plaza. Observing them yields: “You are unaware that you have been the one being watched this entire time.”
There is no jump scare. No monster. The game simply ends when you turn around—the screen fades to white, and the words “v36a Basic Complete. Awaiting v36b: Aware” appear. Mr. Unaware’s work is a meditation on urban alienation taken to a supernatural extreme. The “unawareness” is not just a bug or a quirk of simulation—it’s the point . In a real city, we are all unaware of thousands of simultaneous tragedies, coincidences, and dangers. The game literalizes that: you can see everything, but you are powerless to intervene because you yourself are not fully real to the system.
At first glance, Unaware in the City - v36a Basic presents itself as a deceptively simple interactive fiction title. The filename suggests a versioned work-in-progress (v36a), a “Basic” build (perhaps stripped of advanced mechanics or graphics), and an author who has fully embraced a thematic moniker: Mr. Unaware. But within this sparse framework lies a dense, psychological horror-adjacent experience that forces the player to confront the gap between perception and reality, control and chaos, observer and participant. The Premise: The City That Doesn't Know You Exist The game opens with no fanfare. No title card, no tutorial. The player character simply wakes up on a bench in a generic urban plaza. The city is rendered in a low-fidelity, almost dreamlike visual style—blocky figures, looping ambient noise, and text prompts that fade in and out. The “Unaware” in the title immediately manifests: no NPC acknowledges you. They walk past, through, or over you. Shopkeepers don’t see you. Traffic signals don’t change for you. The city operates on a closed loop of routines, and you are a ghost.