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Do No Harm

$15.99
Release Date:
Developer:
Darts Games
Platforms:
Windows
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About This Game

Do No Harm is a doctor simulator with a Lovecraftian twist. You take on the role of a village doctor, diagnosing and treating patients using ancient and often cryptic medical procedures.

If you’re a fan of profession-related simulators or games that test your decision-making under pressure, Do No Harm is a unique blend of strategy and horror that will keep you guessing until the very end.

  • Lovecraftian Atmosphere

    • Nightmarish entities that warp reality as you play, causing hallucinations, blocking your ability to interact with items, and even deceiving you about treatment results.

    • Anomalies creeping into your daily medical practice, impacting your Sanity.

    • Lovecraftian story involving the proxy war between Azathoth and Cthulhu over the island village and through it the world and humanity.

  • 19-th century Doctor Simulator

    • Diagnose patients based on their symptoms

    • Use tools to narrow down treatment possibilities, and inject the patients with the medicine

    • Consult your Book of Medicine—a beautifully crafted grimoire-like guide.

    • Experiment with remedies inspired by Early Modern medicine, and hope they work… or brace for the consequences.

  • Rich Story & Multiple Endings

    • Reputation system impacting how villagers act around you

    • Each diagnosis, treatment, and moral decision impacts the outcome, leading to multiple endings. Find all 12 Endings.

    • Survive 30 Days: Navigate the pressures of treating the sick while also surviving for 30 days in an increasingly hostile environment.

    • Will you save the villagers, descend into madness, or uncover the truth behind the horrors?

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User Reviews

Mostly Positive
28 user reviews
75%
Positive
3 hrs at review
Recommended

Overal. I really love the game, atmosphere and mechanics BUT, they messed up the daily timer so much. Even with the addition of the 'chill mode'. When you start this game up, immediately on day 1 the clock starts ticking before you even properly had the chance to read through the instructions, there's a daily newspaper you can have a look at while your first patient is already knocking on the door. Could be me, as a non-native speaker who needs a liiiittle bit more time to soak everything in, but I feel punished for it. Now the choice is either 'chill mode', which i feel takes away all the timepressure and the real tension of the game or the 'classic mode' which is just too stressful. At least don't have the counter slow down at times when your patients and or leave the room or something or only count seconds when you actually flip a page in stead of just reading it. i'd still say the overal experience is positive though, but it won't make me do another playthrough

9 helpful
1 hrs at review
Not Recommended

I love the title, I like the concept, but the game just didn't do it for me. The healing gets tedious very quick, some things are explained very vaguely and you get interrupted constantly by random anomalies that you better spot or it's game over. It's a nice try, though.

3 helpful
3 hrs at review
Not Recommended

There are a lot of cool ideas, but unfortunately, they all feel disconnected and confusing rather than harmonizing. Each new gameplay feature just made me distance myself from this game even more and I am quite surprised I managed to play the game until Day 16 out of 31 days. There are many interesting ideas in the game, but unfortunately, they feel disconnected and confusing rather than cohesive. Keeping a game engaging doesn’t require endless features that confuse the player. Instead, this game progressively alienates the player, leading to a sense of being lost as time goes on.

3 helpful 1 funny
4 hrs at review
Not Recommended

The game has a bug for me in which no anomalies appear, which makes the game dull. Interesting concept if it worked. I did not realize it was a bug until 4 hours in and was denied a refund from STEAM, thus the negative review. I actually want to love the game, so if it ever gets fixed, I'll switch the review to positive.

2 helpful
2 hrs at review
Not Recommended

You get punished for RNG. If I'm going to be bad at a game, it should be because I'm bad..not due to randomness.

1 helpful
6 hrs at review
Not Recommended

Good idea, too much repetitive. Also, stop copying Lovecraft and try to be more inspired, the premise of the game is really good, a ruined opportunity.

1 helpful
23 hrs at review
Recommended

Great gameplay with a lot of replay value too. I also really enjoy the art style too. I do feel that some of the concepts that were introduced in relation to diagnosis were not fully utilised and become kinda pointless after the one day. Hoping they keep adding to this game to flesh it out a bit more in that context.

13 hrs at review
Recommended

Easy game with an interesting story. Kinda feels like play amateur surgeon from back in the day. Some of the tools like the wheel could be better explained to you

11 hrs at review
Recommended

Interesting story and gameplay. Can be difficult but in a good way.

12 hrs at review
Recommended

Great game. Very hard to learn but satisfying when you do. Aesthetic/mood with the Deep Ones and all that going on is on point. Kill the cannibal before it's too late.

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System Requirements

Minimum

Minimum:
  • OS: Windows 10/11
  • Processor: Dual Core CPU
  • Memory: 2 GB RAM
  • Graphics: 2 GB
  • Storage: 2 GB available space

FAQ

How much does Do No Harm cost?

Do No Harm costs $15.99.

What are the system requirements for Do No Harm?

Minimum: Minimum: OS: Windows 10/11 Processor: Dual Core CPU Memory: 2 GB RAM Graphics: 2 GB Storage: 2 GB available space

What platforms is Do No Harm available on?

Do No Harm is available on Windows PC.

Is Do No Harm worth buying?

Do No Harm has 75% positive reviews from 28 players.

When was Do No Harm released?

Do No Harm was released on Mar 6, 2025.

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