
Trees Hate You is one of those games that hooks you the second you step into it. This game is both fun and scary. It puts you in a forest and takes you on a picnic there. The forest looks perfectly normal at first glance, but familiar things like trees, winding paths, or incorrect road signs will make you realise something is amiss. However, you become aware that something is wrong after a short while. The trees aren’t just background—they’re alive, aggressive, and honestly kind of creepy.

As you push deeper into the jungle, the game starts messing with your instincts in ways I didn’t expect. Branches move when you think they won’t. Tree trunks suddenly swing into your path. Things that look safe… just aren’t.
What really got me is that the trees don’t just attack—they mess with you. They bait you into trusting them, then flip the situation on you. One second you feel confident, the next you’re punished for it. Every small win feels earned, and every mistake? It feels weirdly personal, like the game is calling you out.
The deeper you go, the more tense it gets. I found myself constantly second-guessing everything:
Is this ground actually stable?
Is that path even real?
Can I trust any of these trees?
At some point, the jungle stops feeling like a place and starts feeling like a trap designed specifically for you.
And through all of it, one thought kept popping into my head: I really wish I had an axe.
Just something—anything—to fight back. But until then, you’re stuck relying on your reflexes, your awareness, and your willingness to keep going… even when the whole forest feels like it’s against you.
Make your way through the jungle while avoiding deadly trees.
Stay alert—trees can move, fall, or trick you at any moment.
Timing is everything: one well-timed jump can save you.
You will fail, and that’s the point—learn from it and keep going.
Arrow keys / WASD → Move left and right
Up arrow / W / Space → Jump



















