There are no monsters waiting in the shadows here. In Human Expenditure Program the horror is quieter — it hides in repetition, in the things you forget, and in what keeps coming back no matter how many times the world resets.
You wake up, live, and suffer. Then everything restarts. The memories are gone, but the pain remains, stitched into something you can’t name. The simulation feels empty at first — plain walls, still rooms, and the quiet hum of something unseen. But the more you look, the more it feels alive. The more it watches you.
This is a game about what we do to each other, about how cruelty can survive even without memory. There’s no blood to shock you, no chase to escape — just time, looping endlessly, asking the same question: If pain resets, does it still matter?
Human Expenditure Program isn’t here to entertain you. It wants to unsettle you — to make you question guilt, control, and the human need to repeat what should be forgotten.
It’s free to play online, but once you step in, don’t expect to walk away unchanged.