caused the screen to shatter into jagged shards, revealing brief, flickering images of a real-world office—desks overturned, monitors glowing with static, and a calendar frozen on a date that hadn't happened yet.

Those who managed to bypass the Windows Defender warnings found themselves in a low-poly, first-person environment. There were no instructions. The player controlled a nameless character in a room made of shifting, geometric glass. The only mechanic was a single button prompt: "Bend" or "Break."

warped the world, stretching the walls into nauseating, liquid shapes.