Let’s break down what MiSide actually is, why the GoldBerg release matters, and whether you should feel the pull to the high seas or the Steam store page. Developed by the enigmatic Russian indie studio AIHASTO , MiSide is a first-person psychological horror game that cleverly masquerades as a dating sim. The premise is simple yet deeply unsettling:

But for the uninitiated, the appearance of a -GoldBerg tag attached to an unfamiliar indie title usually signals one thing: The scene has spoken, and this little game is worth your attention.

But if you truly can’t afford it? Play the GoldBerg release, then tell a friend to buy it. The scariest thing about MiSide isn't the glitching Mita—it's the thought that games this original might disappear if nobody pays for them. Have you played MiSide? Did the twist catch you off guard, or did you see it coming? Let us know in the comments—just don’t mention the Mita in the basement. 👁️

Without spoiling the genius of the narrative, MiSide quickly spirals from "anime dating simulator" into P.T. -levels of dread. The environment glitches. Mita’s eyes go empty. The walls bleed. And you realize you aren't a guest—you’re a prisoner. So, why is the -GoldBerg release making waves?