Five Nights at F***boy's: The Complete Collection is one of the oldest and most beloved FNAF fan games ever made — possibly the very first, released just 11 days after FNAF 2. But forget horror: this is a full-blown turn-based RPG built in RPG Maker where you play as Freddy Fazbear on a quest to have "a radical night of debauchery." With text-to-speech voice acting, absurd humor rooted in 2014's MLG/meme culture, and a surprisingly deep combat system, this remastered collection bundles all three games plus After Story and Finale into one massive package with improved balance and quality-of-life fixes.
If Windows SmartScreen blocks it, click "More info" then "Run anyway"
What Makes FNAFB Special
Five Nights at F***boy's takes the FNAF universe and asks a question nobody expected: what if Freddy Fazbear was the protagonist of a JRPG, and what if the entire thing was voiced by text-to-speech? The result is a game that shouldn't work but absolutely does — a genuinely engaging turn-based RPG wrapped in layer after layer of absurd comedy.
You play as Freddy, who decides he wants to have "a radical night of debauchery at Freddy Fazbear's Pizza." The only problem? Security cameras. So you recruit Bonnie, Chica, and Foxy, and set out to destroy every camera in the building. Along the way you'll fight sentient party hats, buy weapons from Balloon Boy's shop, and face off against Golden Freddy — who's furious he wasn't invited to the party.
The Complete Collection, remastered by fan developer RainCC, takes the original trilogy and smooths out the rough edges with better balance, bug fixes, and quality-of-life improvements. It's the definitive way to experience the series, and it bundles an absolutely massive amount of content into a single download.
FNAFB Complete Collection Gameplay
Combat System & Gameplay
Don't let the meme exterior fool you — FNAFB has a surprisingly deep combat system. Each character gets four options per turn: Scream (basic attack), Skills (special abilities), Guard (boost defense), and Item (use consumables). You manage three resource bars: HP, SP (Special Points for skills), and TP (Technique Points earned by taking damage, used for devastating ultimate attacks).
Character Abilities
Freddy: Top Hat Toss (double hit), Toreador March (put enemies to sleep), Death Inhale (100 TP ultimate — devastating damage).
Bonnie: Bunny Hop (multi-hit + defense reduction), Riff Wave (damage + poison), Motivation Jam (buff an ally's attack and defense).
Chica: Pizza Pass (heal), Caffeine Revival (revive a fallen ally), Mama Bird (buff defense + restore SP to the group).
Foxy: Rush Down (multiple hits), Speed Share (buff the whole party's speed), C Shanty (debuff enemies + silence).
Each of the 10 security cameras acts as a boss fight with a unique gimmick — one drains your SP, another heals every turn, another has extreme speed. You can't just brute-force your way through; each camera demands a different strategy. On top of that, optional Toy animatronic bosses appear once your characters hit level 20, dropping the best weapons in the game.
What's Inside the Complete Collection
This isn't just one game — it's an entire saga. Here's what you get:
FNAFB 1: The foundation. Destroy 10 security cameras, recruit your team, face Golden Freddy. Includes the BB Scenario (play as Balloon Boy) and the wild Vile Scenario (play as Vile from Mega Man X).
FNAFB 2: Same structure with Toy animatronics as recruitable party members. Features Proud Mode with handicaps and Withered animatronics as unlockable characters. Balloon Boy becomes the final boss.
After Story: Time travel, a battle against Michael Jackson, a trip to the land of vaporwave, and a three-phase final fight against Balloon Boy using every animatronic group.
FNAFB 3: The longest entry, split into three acts. Act 1 stars Springtrap (who attacks twice per turn). Act 2 features Golden Freddy with a summoning mechanic. Act 3/Finale is the grand conclusion — all characters vs. Leviathan BB, ending with Freddy going solo in "Ultra Instinct" mode.
On top of all that, there are multiple difficulty modes (Night X, Night XX with restricted healing, and the borderline-impossible Night XXX), hidden areas like the Debug Room (accessed via the Konami Code), Interior Walls, and the unfinished Pizzatorium.
The Lore (Yes, There's Lore)
The story is intentionally ridiculous, and that's the point. Freddy wants to party, cameras are in the way, and Golden Freddy is upset about being left out. But as the trilogy progresses, things escalate in the most absurd way possible: Balloon Boy evolves from an annoying shopkeeper to a recurring villain, eventually ascending to godhood as "Leviathan BB" in the Finale. Springtrap orchestrates his resurrection. Vile from Mega Man X is revealed to be Toy Freddy's son. The After Story involves time-traveling in a DeLorean.
It's the kind of lore that rewards you for paying attention while simultaneously never taking itself seriously. References to Mega Man, Persona, Sonic, Earthbound, Final Fantasy VII, SpongeBob, and Back to the Future are scattered throughout.
What the Community Says
FNAFB has earned a passionate fanbase and consistent praise from reviewers. One placed it in their Top 5 FNAF fan games, calling it a "fun ride from start to finish" — the kind of game where you "turn your brain off in the best way possible" while still enjoying genuinely engaging RPG combat.
Another reviewer called it "the most underappreciated FNAF fan game out there," comparing its quality progression across entries to Day Shift at Freddy's. The general consensus? The Complete Collection improves significantly on the originals, FNAFB2 edges out the first game in content, and FNAFB3's Springtrap Act and Finale are the series highlights.
The original GameJolt page has accumulated 1.8 million views and over 5,600 likes, with the Complete Collection page adding another 1.2 million views — proof that this absurd little RPG has found its audience.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Five Nights at F***boy's free?
Yes, the Complete Collection is completely free to download and play. Both the original games and the remastered collection have always been free.
How long does it take to beat?
The main story across all three games, After Story, and Finale can take 15-25 hours depending on your pace. Adding optional content like the BB Scenario, Vile Scenario, Proud Mode, and hidden areas, you're looking at 30+ hours of content.
What's the difference between Complete Collection and Final Mix?
The Complete Collection by RainCC is a full gameplay and visual remaster in RPG Maker MV with better balance and bug fixes. The Final Mix is the original version by Sable Lynn with minor updates and a Hardcore Mode. The Complete Collection is the recommended way to play.
Is there an Android version?
There's no official Android port, though the GameJolt page for the Complete Collection mentions community guides for running it on Android and Mac.
Do I need to know FNAF lore to enjoy this?
Not at all. The game uses FNAF characters and locations as a jumping-off point for its own completely original (and absurd) story. Knowing FNAF enhances some jokes, but it's not required.
Is the early game really that grindy?
The section before recruiting Foxy can be tedious since you're stuck with an underleveled Freddy. Push through to recruit your first party members — the game opens up significantly once you have a full team and the combat system clicks into place.