App Feature
First-person Backrooms-style chaser where you either flee from or play as various monsters. Features endless levels, a growing roster of enemies (e.g., Wugy, Rainbow Blue, Green Monster), switchable roles (player or monster), and unlockable skins.
Verdict
Verdict: A fast, free Backrooms chaser with role-switching fun, but expect repetition and mobile-game rough edges.
Who is it for
Best for:
- Fans of Backrooms/Nextbot chase games seeking quick sessions
- Players who enjoy swapping roles between survivor and monster
Not ideal for:
- Gamers wanting deep story, progression, or polished AAA visuals
- Players who dislike repetitive levels or ad-supported experiences
Real-world User Experience
Users like it:
Simple pick-up-and-play chases, the ability to be hunter or prey, lots of monster types, and steady difficulty increases that keep runs tense.
Users complain about:
Repetitive level design over long sessions, difficulty spikes, typical mobile ads, and occasional jank or control quirks found in similar titles.
Is it Worth Paying For?
Free download with no stated mandatory purchases; value is solid if you’re fine with ads and grinding for skins. No reason to spend unless optional IAPs exist for convenience.
How it Compares to Alternatives
Compared to other Backrooms/Nextbot runners, the role-switching (player vs. monster) stands out for variety. It’s lighter and more arcade-like than survival-horror staples, and less polished than premium horror or asymmetric multiplayer titles, but competitive for a free, casual scare-and-chase loop.
Summary
Naxtbot Blackroom Chasing Time delivers a straightforward, adrenaline-focused chase experience: run, hide, or flip the script and become the monster. With endless levels, a catalog of familiar internet-horror creatures, and skin unlocks, it hits the fun, low-commitment niche well. The 3.9 rating and mass downloads suggest broad, casual appeal, tempered by repetition, ads, and some rough edges. If you want quick Backrooms thrills and like experimenting with both sides of the hunt, it’s an easy free try; if you need depth, narrative, or high production values, you may outgrow it quickly.












