The creator of Infinite Craft has a new game where you explore a secret-filled social hub as your mouse cursor

A bunch of cursors huddled around a projector screen watching a black-and-white Popeye cartoon.
(Image credit: Neal Agarwal)

Within moments of opening Cursor Camp, laughter erupts out of me like the clumsy bark of a circus seal as I do something I've done hundreds of times before—wiggle my mouse cursor back and forth in time to a song I'm listening to—because someone else on screen has followed my lead. According to the flag by their cursor, they're in India. We'll probably never see or speak to each other for the rest of our lives, but this ghost of an interaction is a minuscule joy we can share from thousands of miles away.

These are the sorts of things that get me all weepy about games like Journey and even Club Penguin, the latter of which Cursor Camp reminds me of in the best way possible. It's by Neal Agarwal, the browser game developer behind oddities like Infinite Craft and The Password Game. My first impression suggests that Cursor Camp isn't as surprising or ambitious as Infinite Craft, but it offers a kind of experience I crave and is extremely hard to find these days.

It is, to my eye, a browser-based social MMO like Club Penguin or Habbo Hotel, but without the text chat capabilities and few traditional 'game-y' elements. Instead, you interact with other players by sharing little moments—explore the camp by waving your mouse around, pick up a stick of marshmallows to roast smores, watch movies like 12 Angry Men on a projector screen, listen to music as it blares from a DJ setup, and so on. There's even a soccer field (football pitch?) where you can kick a ball around and quaff orange slices to move faster.

Article continues below
2026 gamesBest PC gamesFree PC gamesBest FPS gamesBest RPGsBest co-op games

2026 games: All the upcoming games
Best PC games: Our all-time favorites
Free PC games: Freebie fest
Best FPS games: Finest gunplay
Best RPGs: Grand adventures
Best co-op games: Better together

Justin first became enamored with PC gaming when World of Warcraft and Neverwinter Nights 2 rewired his brain as a wide-eyed kid. As time has passed, he's amassed a hefty backlog of retro shooters, CRPGs, and janky '90s esoterica. Whether he's extolling the virtues of Shenmue or troubleshooting some fiddly old MMO, it's hard to get his mind off games with more ambition than scruples. When he's not at his keyboard, he's probably birdwatching or daydreaming about a glorious comeback for real-time with pause combat. Any day now...

You must confirm your public display name before commenting

Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.