Don't burn the house down!

Don’t burn the house down! is a single-player task adventure where the whole challenge is finishing the day before small mistakes snowball into a total disaster.

Don’t burn the house down! takes a simple idea and pushes it well: your mom is coming home, you have a task list to finish, and one bad decision can send the entire day off the rails. The result is a solo adventure with anxious comedy energy, where time pressure and improvisation stay connected from start to finish.

The strongest part is the mix of clear objectives and unstable consequences. The official description mentions side quests, secrets, choices that change the day, and a final score, so the experience is not just a checklist simulator. The real appeal comes from figuring out how much you can clean up, explore, and fix before everything collapses.

Players who enjoy short narrative games, domestic-chaos humor, and route optimization challenges will usually get the most from it. Don’t burn the house down! works best when every decision feels tied to your final run quality.

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How to play Don't burn the house down!

Start by looking at your daily task list and sorting what feels mandatory, what can wait, and what looks like an optional detour that might lead to a secret or extra score. Because the game is single-player and timer-driven, interacting with everything in random order usually hurts more than it helps.

The practical goal is simple: finish your chores before your mom gets home, control risk, and take side quests only when they do not destroy your main route. When the game pushes you toward a difficult choice, think in terms of time cost as much as immediate reward.

Tips for Don't burn the house down!

The game gets stronger when you play around priorities and consequences instead of pure speed.

  • Read the list before acting: task order matters more than rushing.
  • Not every detour is worth it immediately: a good side quest is one that fits your route.
  • Keep the clock in mind: the whole structure depends on beating your mom home.
  • Replay for better scores: part of the fun is finding a cleaner route after the first run.

Curiosities about Don't burn the house down!

The official page explicitly presents the game as a single-player experience, which puts all the pressure on the player’s own decisions.

It also highlights a global leaderboard and unlockable secrets, so replaying for a cleaner day and better score is clearly part of the design.