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Late Night DJ

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Late Night DJ places you behind the microphone in a lonely radio booth, where the night begins with calm music and small talk but quickly turns into something unexplainable. You play as a host covering a midnight shift, surrounded by analog gear, a worn-out couch, and the hum of fluorescent lights. The studio feels still, but not silent. As you continue the broadcast, interruptions begin—at first just static, then whispers, then voices that shouldn’t know what they know. The station itself doesn’t change, but the feeling in the room does.

A Familiar Job That Turns on You

Tasks in Late Night DJ are simple on paper: answer phone calls, play requested tracks, adjust the antenna when the signal drops. But these tasks start to behave unpredictably. The same caller keeps returning. A phone rings even when it’s off the hook. Lights flicker in rhythm with voices you can’t trace. One by one, the tools of your job become part of the threat. The vending machine hums too loudly. A figure appears outside the window and doesn’t blink. You’re not being attacked — you’re being studied.

Choices With No Right Answer

Throughout the night, you’re forced to make small decisions: who to listen to, what messages to ignore, whether to stay in the booth or explore the hallway outside. Each decision shifts what happens next. There are multiple endings, but none of them feel like clean escapes. The horror in Late Night DJ doesn’t chase you—it waits for you to choose wrong. Sometimes silence is safer than a response. Sometimes it isn’t. The tension builds in what’s left unsaid, in the weight behind every interaction.

The Studio as a Character

The game world is limited to a few connected rooms, but every detail plays a role. Posters on the wall seem to change. Old boxes shift position. A red rotary phone glows faintly, daring you to pick it up. The station is small, but it becomes a character of its own—a place that reacts to you. As the night deepens, so does your connection to the space. You’re not just broadcasting anymore. You’re part of the signal.

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