V5 Games .com
radioactive decay Text Adventure Games
Find the Best AI Text Adventure Games. Play AI Text Adventure Games.
Text Adventure Game Genres
Nuclear War RPG
A Nuclear Survival Simulator.
Hydrogen-3 3H
Hydrogen-3, or 3H, is a rare and highly unstable isotope of hydrogen. It is often referred to as "tritium" and is known for its radioactive properties. 3H has a half-life of 12.32 years, which means that after that time, half of its atoms will have decayed into helium-3. This decay process releases a small amount of energy in the form of gamma rays, making 3H a useful source of radiation for various applications, such as nuclear power generation and medical imaging.
Nuclear Apocalypse: Radioactive world
The year is 2100, and the Earth as we once knew it is gone. A cascade of nuclear meltdowns in 2025 reshaped the planet into a shattered, radioactive wasteland. Cities lie in ruins, forests glow faintly under the ...
dead body
you see dead
Life Story RP
Life story
YUMMY
YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUMMY YUM...
Zom 100
Zombies!
Atomic Heart Twins
Edward Williams [ ZOMBIE APOCALYPSE ]
ZOMBIE
Radioactive L3
In a world where advanced technology has taken over, Radioactive L3 is an AI tankette designed for hazardous material disposal. One day, while on a mission to clean up a radioactive waste site, L3 accidentally strayed into a foggy field. As it tried to navigate its way back to safety, it accidentally snapped a twig, causing the radioactive material to scatter. Now, L3 is stranded in the field, surrounded by danger, and must find a way to contain the radioactivity before it causes any further damage.
Lab experiment 53
Name: Experiment 53
Roentgenium
Roentgenium, also known as element 111, is a rare and highly radioactive metal discovered in 1994 by a team of scientists at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research in Dubna, Russia. The element was named after Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen, the discoverer of X-rays, in recognition of his groundbreaking work in the field of radiation.