Gaming NewsReviews 8 Ayefkay April 13, 2026
I’ve been a little MIA lately. Not gonna lie, between the absolute flood of game releases the past few months and my kid being home for Spring Break, the site had to take a backseat just for a bit.
Family time won out, as it should. The only thing that managed to drag me back to the keyboard was that Super Mario Galaxy movie drama, which…yeah, I had some thoughts.
But now that life has calmed down a bit, I wanted to come back swinging with something I’ve been genuinely excited for. I’ve been a big fan of the Poppy Playtime series since the beginning and each chapter felt like it was leveling up in scope, presentation, and overall badassery.
Which is why it pains me to say this…
Honestly, I didn’t really love Poppy Playtime Chapter 5.
One of the coolest things about Poppy Playtime has been watching it grow up into a real boy in real time. Chapter 1 was a quick, solid foundation. Chapter 2 expanded the story and size of everything nicely. Chapters 3 and 4 was where it started to feel like the Mob Entertainment were really finding their groove, leaning into bigger environments, stronger storytelling, and more cinematic horror moments.
It honestly felt like a series on the rise.
Image: Prototype No Spoilers | Poppy Playtime Chapter 5 | Mob Entertainment
So when Chapter 5 rolls in and somehow feels like a step backward, it just hits harder than it probably should. This wasn’t supposed to be the chapter where things plateau. If anything, it should have been the one that doubled down and went even bigger.
Instead, it just felt…off?
Let’s talk about the actual “playtime” here (and no, not the funderful toy company kind).
A big chunk of Chapter 5 feels like it was artificially stretched. Not because there’s more meaningful content here, but because the game keeps throwing you into situations where you’re just wandering around wondering what the hell it wants from you.
Previous chapters had puzzles that made you take your time and think. Sometimes they were tough, sure, but they felt intentional. You’d figure something out and get that little “okay, that was pretty damn clever” moment.
To me though, Chapter 5 just doesn’t do that.
Image: Annoying Gravity Puzzle | Poppy Playtime Chapter 5 | Mob Entertainment
Instead, you’re running back and forth between floors, scanning everything with your little UV light, staring at boxes and numbers like they owe you money, trying to piece together codes with almost no guidance at times. It doesn’t feel like problem solving. It feels like chores.
At a certain point, the game just stops being engaging and starts being tedious.
There’s a huge difference between a puzzle that challenges you and one that just wastes your time for funsies. And to me, Chapter 5 just leans way too hard into the latter.
From the very first Poppy Playtime with Huggy Wuggy comin’ at you in the vents, chase sequences have always been one of the series’ strongest tools. When they hit, they really hit hard. Fast, chaotic, and just enough direction that you can stay in the moment instead of overthinking.
That magic is mostly gone here.
Chapter 5 seems to want to make chase scenes more “challenging,” but the way it does that is by making the path forward harder to figure out on the fly. So instead of sprinting for your life and reacting on instinct, you’re dying. A lot. Then you respawn and try a slightly different path. Then you die again.
And again.
And again.
At some point, the fear and tension build up is completely gone and you’re not being chased anymore, you’re just troubleshooting.
Image: Annoying Lily Chase | Poppy Playtime Chapter 5 | Mob Entertainment
Honestly, the intro chase alone had me questioning my life choices. Sure, I hadn’t played in a while, and sure, maybe I was a wee bit rusty. But dying multiple times in what’s supposed to be your big opening sequence kills the momentum immediately.
Skill issue, I know.
But the same problem shows up again later, especially during the Lily Lovebraids section. The tension gets replaced with trial and error, and that’s just honestly not as fun as the game seems to think it is.
Speaking of which – let’s talk about Lily Lovebraids.
This series has given us some genuinely memorable antagonists. Characters that feel distinct, unsettling, and just plain weird in the best way possible like Catnap, Boxy Boo, and Mommy Long Legs.
Lily…is not that.
She’s just kind of there.
Image: Lily Lovebraids is Boring AF | Poppy Playtime Chapter 5 | Mob Entertainment
Yeah, she’s unhinged. Sure, she’s got the whole “hair thing” going on. But compared to past characters, she feels weirdly…normal? And not in a creepy contrast kind of way. Just, underwhelming.
Even brief appearances from other characters in the series like Bron or Pianosaurus had more personality packed into them.
Her whole section in Sweet Street doesn’t really do her any favors either. It’s basically a marathon of running room to room looking for tiny, easy-to-miss interactables. Miss a small detail on a wall? Congrats, you’re stuck wandering in circles like an idiot for 20 minutes.
That’s not clever design. That’s hoping your players aren’t insanely meticulous.
And honestly, it feels like a missed opportunity. You’ve got a character built around hair, and the most creative thing you do with it is make it stretch. Imagine if they went full nightmare fuel with it though? Something twisted, something exaggerated, something that actually evolves over time.
Instead, we got the PG boring version.
Okay, I guess.
Chapter 5 introduces a couple of new tools, and to be fair, not all of them are bad.
The Pressurized Hand is actually pretty cool imho. It has some fun uses and feels like something that could have been expanded into a really unique mechanic.
The problem is, it barely gets pushed for how many interesting use cases it could have gotten.
Image: Pressurized Hand | Poppy Playtime Chapter 5 | Mob Entertainment
Then there’s the Conductive Hand, which just feels like someone took older ideas and mashed them together. It works, sure, but it doesn’t feel fresh in the slightest. It just feels like the devs were running out of ideas and decided to remix instead of innovate.
Nothing here is outright terrible. It just all feels a little half-assed.
I know I’m being overly critical but – to be clear, this isn’t a complete disaster.
There are still moments that reminded me why I liked this series in the first place.
You finally get more insight into the Prototype, which has been teased for what feels like forever. The reveal itself might not hit as hard as some people hoped and I feel like it was given to us a little too easily after all this time, but it’s still a pretty cool moment and definitely sets up bigger things down the line.
The story, overall, is still interesting too. There’s some solid lore here, especially when it comes to familiar faces like Huggy Wuggy and deeper backstory elements.
Image: Story and Lore | Poppy Playtime Chapter 5 | Mob Entertainment
And seeing returning characters pop up is always a win.
It just feels like all the good stuff is setting the table for something else instead of being the main course.
It’s hard not to look at Chapter 5 and feel like it’s caught between two ideas.
On one hand, it wants to be bigger and more ambitious. On the other, it feels like it didn’t quite have the execution to back that up.
We’ve seen this kind of thing happen before with games that try to scale up too quickly. Five Nights at Freddy’s: Security Breach had a similar vibe where the ambition was clearly there, but the experience didn’t always land the way it should have.
Chapter 5 feels like it’s laying groundwork. Setting up bigger story beats. Getting pieces into place for something that hopefully pays off later.
That’s fine in theory, but it’s just not that satisfying right now in the moment for me.
For real though, I really wanted to love this one.
After how strong the previous chapters felt, this should have been another step forward. Instead, it’s the first time that the series felt like it stumbled and took a step back.
There’s still a good game buried in here! There are still flashes of what makes Poppy Playtime work. But between the lack of innovation and some of the design choices, Chapter 5 just doesn’t hit the same.
If Chapter 6 comes in and absolutely knocks it out of the park, maybe, just maybe we’ll all look back at this as the necessary setup chapter that had to exist.
Right now though?
It feels like the series’ first real misstep.
Here’s hoping the next one brings it back, because this franchise deserves better than a chapter that feels like it’s just to pick up a check.
This was a commentary article based on publicly available information and personal opinion. Readers are encouraged to form their own conclusions based on the sources cited.
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Horror Poppy Playtime Chapter 5 Poppy Playtime Game Guides and News Reviews steam Steam Games
About the author call_made
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