Lab Havoc is a physics-based sandbox destruction game where you design deadly lab experiments using traps, weapons, and gadgets. Instead of a story mode, the game focuses on creative chaos—you build setups, release clones, and watch how chain reactions unfold in real time.
Unlike many sandbox destruction games that only focus on “ragdoll fun,” this game adds a strategy layer: placement, timing, and combo interactions directly affect your score.
Goal: Create trap setups that maximize damage and chain reactions
Gameplay:
Controls: click, drag, place, and start. The real depth comes from how you design your setup.
1. Don’t overload traps early
New players often place everything at once. Instead, start with 2–3 core traps and build around them. Cleaner setups usually create stronger chain reactions.
2. Angle matters more than weapon power
A weak saw placed at the right angle can outperform explosives. Focus on directional control and bounce paths.
3. Force clone movement first
Before damage, think movement. Use pushers, ramps, or gravity traps to guide clones into kill zones.
4. Combine slow + instant damage traps
Best combos come from mixing:
This creates multi-hit chain scoring instead of single kills.
5. Replay and tweak instead of rebuilding
Small adjustments (rotation, spacing, timing) often change the entire outcome. The game rewards iteration, not rebuilding from scratch.
Playing Lab Havoc feels less like a “game level” and more like a physics experiment lab. The most satisfying moments come when a simple setup unexpectedly triggers a full chain reaction across the entire chamber.
One common mistake players make is focusing only on destructive power. In practice, positioning and timing matter more than raw damage. After a few sessions, you start thinking like a system designer rather than a player.
Compared to similar sandbox destruction games, Lab Havoc feels more structured—less random chaos, more “controlled experiments gone wrong.”



















