Neal.fun browser game
I'm Not a Robot
It starts like a normal CAPTCHA, then gets weird fast.
Game guides collection
Play here, then jump to the level you need.
If you get stuck, use the jump box or the level links below. The whole run is here, from the first checkbox to the last screen.
How it plays
Every screen looks familiar for a second, then changes the rules. Some levels ask you to click, some to type, some to draw, drag, or catch one small detail.
Best way to start
Play a few levels in the embed. If a level needs more room, go fullscreen. If the frame gives you trouble, open the official Neal.fun page.
Walkthrough roadmap
I'm Not a Robot level guide ranges
Use these ranges when you know roughly where you are stuck but do not remember the exact level yet.
Basic human checks
Mostly straightforward checks. Good place to learn how literally the game wants you to read.
Rule changes
This is where the game starts slipping in small rule changes.
Precision and timing
Precision matters more here. Slow down.
Mixed puzzle logic
More mixed puzzles, more chances to misread the prompt.
Late-game traps
A lot of the pain here is in tiny details and fake obvious answers.
Final verification run
The last stretch feels better if you stop rushing.
Popular problem levels
Stuck points people look up a lot
Short hints only. Open the full page if you want the full walkthrough.
Checkbox opener
Click the box and wait for the next prompt. The first level establishes the joke before the game starts bending the format.
Open level guideLevel 17Precision check
If the task asks for accuracy, use slow mouse movement and avoid trackpad swipes. A wider view gives you more control.
Open level guideLevel 19Read before reacting
This is the kind of level where the obvious answer may not be the requested answer. Pause before the first click.
Open level guideLevel 23Where is the Guitar Cat?
Move away from the stage, scan the orange picnic tables, and inspect the back of the black shirt before you verify.
Open level guideLevel 24Visual sorting
Scan the whole board first, then answer. Missing one small visual cue is usually what forces a restart.
Open level guideLevel 30Pattern pressure
When the screen gets busier, separate the task into smaller checks: wording, target, action, then confirmation.
Open level guideLevel 34Popular stuck point
Many players get stuck here because the task looks like a normal CAPTCHA. Look for the unusual constraint before moving.
Open level guideLevel 37Impostor-style prompt
Compare every option against the exact wording. Similar faces, labels, or categories can be part of the trick.
Open level guideLevel 46Late challenge
Expect combined mechanics. If you fail twice, change your process instead of repeating the same sequence faster.
Open level guideLevel 48Final proof
Stay patient through the ending sequence and use the certificate moment as confirmation that the run is complete.
Open level guideAll level links
Open a written and video guide for each level
Every level has its own page with text help, video help, and next or previous links.
Game features
Why it works
The joke is that every task looks normal right before it does not.
Human verification challenges
The whole run is built from checkboxes, image prompts, typing, dragging, drawing, rhythm, and logic.
Progressive rule design
It teaches you a rule, then swaps it out on the next screen.
Short-session friendly
You can play a few levels and leave, or sit down and clear the whole thing.
Observation over speed
Most bad runs come from clicking too early.
Browser-first play
No install. Just load it and start.
Memorable finale
The ending works because the game fully commits to the bit.
About the game
A CAPTCHA joke that keeps going
It starts with the oldest checkbox on the internet and turns it into 48 small puzzles. Some are obvious. Some are annoying. Most are funny once you see the trick.
- Creator
- Neal Agarwal
- Format
- Browser puzzle
- Levels
- 48
- Best view
- Desktop or fullscreen
Quick notes
Small checks, stranger rules
- Read the prompt before you click. A lot of the late-game pain comes from missing one word.
- Switch to fullscreen for drawing, rhythm, or precision tasks.
- If the embed gives you trouble, open the official Neal.fun page.
FAQ
I'm Not a Robot questions
What is I'm Not a Robot?
It is a browser puzzle game by Neal Agarwal built around fake CAPTCHA checks.
Can I play it on this page?
Yes. Press Play in the embed above. If the frame is blocked, use the Neal.fun link on this page.
How many levels are in the game?
There are 48 levels in the main run.
What should I do when a level feels impossible?
Read the prompt again, slow down, and look for the one rule you missed. That is usually the answer.
Is fullscreen better?
Usually, yes. It helps with precise clicks, small details, and late levels.
Is this the official Neal.fun page?
No. This is a guide page. The official Neal.fun version is linked here.
