Net.Attack()
CODE OR DIE! Hack enemy systems & survive the security response by engineering lethal bullet-heaven algorithms. Your brain power determines your firepower across 150+ programming nodes. Debug your failures. Optimize your code. Complete the heist. HACK THE PLANET!
Net.Attack() is a bullet-heaven roguelite where you visually program your own attack algorithms using 150+ drag-and-drop nodes, then watch them execute in real-time combat against security system hordes.
Game Features:

Build devastating attack algorithms using drag-and-drop programming nodes. Chain triggers, branch conditionals, and loop executions to create thousands of unique combinations. Your custom code unleashes bullet-heaven chaos automatically. You focus on strategy and survival while your algorithms execute.
Chain nodes to spawn projectiles that multiply on impact. Let the enemies shooting at each other or loop execution to create sustained area-of-effect devastation

Break into hostile systems across multiple regions in a near-future cyberwar. Each region presents unique security protocols and escalating difficulty levels.

Face relentless waves of security countermeasures in fast-paced bullet-heaven combat. Your custom-coded algorithms execute automatically based on the logic you engineer, unleashing storms of projectiles while you navigate the chaos. Each run pushes your builds to their breaking point.
- 150+ Programming Nodes - Build unlimited algorithmic combinations
- Multiple Hacker Characters - Unique abilities and specializations
- Escalating Regions -
- Multiple game modes -
- Hacker Ranking Progression - Unlock content through skill mastery
- Dark Market Upgrades - Spend extracted Files on permanent power
- Bullet-Heaven Combat - Your code unleashes overwhelming firepower
- No RNG Excuses - Deterministic challenge where logic and skill beats luck
- Visual Programming - Accessible to beginners, infinite depth for masters
Copyright ByteRockers' Games GmbH & Co. KG. All rights reserved. ByteRockers Games is a trademark registered in Germany and the USA.