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IncrementalOnlineFree

Bitburner

A programming-based incremental: script your way through a cyberpunk net, automate hacking with a NetScript API, and break the simulation.

4.6 (489 reviews)21k playingReleased 2021

// About this game

Bitburner is best understood as incremental built around code as the main verb, not as a normal game with a small programming minigame attached. Bitburner is a cyberpunk idle/incremental where progress comes from writing scripts. Its NetScript API is real JavaScript, and the entire game is about automating the grind — weakening, growing and hacking servers — into a self-running money machine. It starts as a few manual hacks and ends with you architecting a distributed botnet. The useful question for a new player is not simply "is it about programming?", but what kind of thinking it asks for: JavaScript and TypeScript, incremental, hacking and free, and a willingness to test an idea by letting the simulation run. Released in 2021 by Hydroflame, it sits in the catalog because the program you write is the thing that actually changes the game state.

The progression is about compounding automation. A small script saves a little time, a better script unlocks a larger system, and eventually the game becomes a study in orchestration: scheduling work, routing resources, measuring bottlenecks and deciding when to rebuild your own tooling. In Bitburner, that means the fun is in the gap between an intention and a working implementation. You start with a rough plan, translate it into the tools the game provides, then watch the result expose every missing condition. A direct solution may pass the first level or match, but the better solutions usually come from noticing a pattern: repeated movement, wasted work, poor targeting, bad routing, a race condition, a blocked path, or a decision that should have been stored as state instead of hard-coded.

The language side is centered on JavaScript and TypeScript, but the transferable skill is broader than syntax. You practice decomposition, debugging, iteration and the habit of reading the rules before blaming the machine. The intermediate rating is a good signal that the game expects basic programming comfort: loops, conditionals, state and debugging are part of normal play. Because it is online, the game also has a social or persistent edge: your code has to survive contact with leaderboards, shared state, other players or changing live conditions instead of only beating a frozen puzzle once. The best sessions are usually not the ones where everything works immediately; they are the ones where a failed run gives you a clear hypothesis for the next version. If the game has leaderboards, ratings or community solutions, those become useful mirrors rather than just bragging rights, because they show how many different shapes a correct program can take.

Bitburner is strongest for players who like the feeling of making a system slightly smarter each time they touch it. It will be less satisfying if you want fast reflex challenges, cinematic spectacle or a puzzle with only one intended answer. The reward is more specific: seeing your own instructions harvest, fight, route, query, build, solve or survive without your hand on the controls. It is also easy to recommend as a trial because the entry cost is low: you can open it, test whether the programming model clicks, and only then decide how deep you want to go. Taken on its own terms, it is a practical way to turn programming concepts into a visible loop, where every bug is part of the play and every improvement has a concrete effect on the world in front of you.

// What you’ll write

NetScript is real JavaScript with a game API injected through ns. Even early scripts already become small automation loops.

early-hack.jsjavascript
/** @param {NS} ns */
export async function main(ns) {
  const target = 'foodnstuff';
  while (true) {
    if (ns.getServerSecurityLevel(target) > 10) await ns.weaken(target);
    else if (ns.getServerMoneyAvailable(target) < 1_000_000) await ns.grow(target);
    else await ns.hack(target);
  }
}

Bitburner NS.hack docs ↗

4.6
489 reviews
5 ★
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1 ★

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