
Endless Stairwell
A downloadable surreal TTRPG onegeon
Endless Stairwell is a compact system-neutral TTRPG onegeon inspired by surreal horror games like P.T. and MyHouse.wad. Use this looping dungeon to give your next game and players a surreal, puzzling twist!
This onegeon includes:
- A classic survival horror puzzle to get players thinking. Juggle fuses, explore the stairwell and get out.
- Simple countdown mechanic to haunt your players and raise the stakes if they stay in the stairwell too long.
This onegeon comes in A4 (210mm × 297mm) in PDF format with all the details (and the solution) you need to use Endless Starwell with zero fuss.
Endless Stairwell was created for Onegeon Jam by Cats Have No Lord.
Onegeon Jam Logo was created by Sam Long available for use by all jam participants.
Thank you for hosting!
| Updated | 15 days ago |
| Status | Released |
| Category | Physical game |
| Rating | Rated 5.0 out of 5 stars (5 total ratings) |
| Author | CABBAGEHEAD |
| Genre | Puzzle |
| Tags | Backrooms, Creepy, Horror, Psychological Horror, resident-evil, Surreal, Survival Horror, Tabletop, Tabletop role-playing game |
| Asset license | Creative Commons Attribution v4.0 International |
| Average session | About a half-hour |
| Languages | English |
Download
Click download now to get access to the following files:
Community Copies
Support this surreal TTRPG onegeon at or above a special price point to receive something exclusive.
Community Copies
Community copies are available for free to anyone who can't afford to buy the game. If you're facing hardships or need a break; feel free to take a copy, no questions asked!
Every purchase of the game donates another community copy for others to claim.
Development log
- More Community Copies15 days ago
- Endless Stairwell hit 100 downloads! More Community Copies.32 days ago
- Endless Stairwell featured on Indie Game Roundup!51 days ago

Comments
Log in with itch.io to leave a comment.
A+
Thank you. :)
Really like the look of this, especially the puzzle, and I'm looking forward to running it.
I just want to make sure I haven't misread anything, but is there a reason why you couldn't slot in the first fuse (turns on light 1 and 3) and then slot the second fuse (turns on light 2) to solve it? It seems like the purple fuse wouldn't be needed
Thank you for the comment. :)
And good catch! You're supposed to have all fuses screwed in to solve the puzzle and there's more than one solution. I only give one example here.
I've updated the puzzle and it should work a little more clearly now.