App Feature
First-person stealth puzzler where you play a grounded schoolkid trying to slip past sharp-eyed parents, solve household-based riddles, manage noise and line-of-sight, and discover multiple escape routes with light progression and cosmetics.
Verdict
Verdict: A clever, tense stealth escape game with memorable puzzles, held back by frequent, interruptive ads and slow content updates.
Who is it for
Best for:
- Fans of stealth and escape-room style puzzles (e.g., Granny/Hello Neighbor vibes).
- Players who enjoy experimenting with multiple endings and smart enemy AI.
- Casual mobile gamers seeking quick, replayable challenges.
Not ideal for:
- Anyone frustrated by mid-run ads interrupting gameplay flow.
- Players wanting frequent new chapters or a deep upgrade/meta system.
- Those expecting perfectly polished controls and zero glitches.
Real-world User Experience
Users like it:
Funny dialogue; tense, clever stealth loop; satisfying household puzzles; smart AI that notices small changes; multiple endings and speedrun potential; smooth performance and appealing, clean graphics; playable offline; relatively few forced ads for some users.
Users complain about:
Ads can pop up during crucial moments and cause failed runs; occasional control quirks (joystick placement) and minor glitches (being caught unexpectedly); slow rollout of new chapters/content.
Is it Worth Paying For?
Free with ads and no IAP. There’s nothing to buy, so value is strong if you can tolerate (or mitigate by playing offline) the ads; otherwise the interruptions may outweigh the savings.
How it Compares to Alternatives
Compared to Granny and Hello Neighbor–style titles, it’s lighter and more accessible while preserving stealth tension and environmental logic. The AI’s attention to household states feels fresh, and multiple escape routes add replayability. However, alternatives often handle monetization less intrusively and may receive more frequent updates or deeper progression systems.
Summary
SCHOOLBOY RUNAWAY – STEALTH delivers a compact, high-tension stealth experience built around believable, household puzzles and parents who actually notice what you’ve disturbed. Its charm comes from cheeky writing, smart AI, and multiple endings that invite experimentation and speedrunning. The biggest drawback is ad frequency that can interrupt runs and a slower cadence of new chapters. If you enjoy stealth puzzlers and can live with (or reduce) the ads, this is an easy recommendation—polished enough to hook you, simple enough to pick up anytime, and deep enough to keep you coming back for cleaner, faster escapes.





