I.T Never Ends

I.T Never Ends

About the Game

Ticket #404: User cannot find their soul.
Ticket #500: The printer is breathing again.
Ticket #237: URGENT - Floor 3.5 won't stop existing.

In I.T. NEVER ENDS, you are the newly hired Systems Administrator at a company that was definitely founded in 2015, regardless of what the USB drive buried in the wall says.

Your job? Process tickets. Keep the lights on. Don't let the coffee machine's prophecies ruin anyone's morning.

The pay is bad. The hours are worse. If any of your metrics hit zero, you're gone. And something tells you the Bahamas aren't in your future.


Every day brings a deluge of tech support requests from your coworkers. The interface is simple. The choices are not.

  • SWIPE TO SURVIVE: Gary needs his password reset to GaryRocks123. Again. The brute-force bots are thrilled. Swipe Right to approve or Swipe Left to deny. Both options have consequences.

  • BALANCE FOUR METRICS: Productivity. Budget. Morale. Entropy. Let any one flatline and your shift ends. Permanently. Let Entropy climb too high and the building starts... remembering things.

  • EVERY TICKET MATTERS: That keyboard pulsating with ectoplasm? Not your biggest problem. The elevator now goes to a floor that doesn't exist. Three coworkers have been texting "almost back" for an hour. And Legal needs VPN access from somewhere redacted.

Get your hands dirty with tactile Manual Override Minigames:

  • REDACT FORBIDDEN TEXT: Marketing accidentally CC'd the summoning ritual to the whole company. Again. Censor the document before anyone reads it and loses their mind. Some things were not meant for mortal eyes.

  • STABILIZE THE NETWORK: The server room has developed its own weather system. Patch Packet Loss, plug violent Stack Overflows, and reroute power before rack 7 floods. It rains at 2:47 PM. Precisely.

  • HUNT ROGUE DATA: Track volatile data entities through the server architecture before they corrupt something important or find you first.

"Connection lost, like ships in stormy sea / The server sleeps, and will not answer thee."
Actual error message. Beautiful but unhelpful.

You are employee #47. Or maybe #48. The numbers keep changing.

Punch in. Process tickets. Don't ask what happened to Marvin.

Initial Release