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Each session begins with an empty space and a few tools available. You place traps, adjust positions, and decide how everything connects before starting the test.
Once it begins, the ragdoll drops in and interacts with whatever you built. Sometimes the result is exactly what you expected. Other times it goes in a completely different direction, bouncing off surfaces or missing key traps entirely. That unpredictability is part of the appeal. Even small changes in placement can lead to very different outcomes.
It’s not about how many tools you use, but where you put them. A well-placed trap can do more than several scattered ones that never connect.
Watching how the ragdoll moves helps more than guessing. Once you understand its path, it becomes easier to place traps where they’ll actually trigger.
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Lab Havoc works because it doesn’t force a single solution. You experiment, adjust, and try again. Some setups fail instantly, others unexpectedly work better than planned — and that’s what keeps each run interesting.