The May 2026 Issue of Gamer Gunk has appeared! Click the link to read right now!
May 2026 - Gamer Gunk

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The May 2026 Issue of Gamer Gunk has appeared! Click the link to read right now!
May 2026 - Gamer Gunk

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
more pics of Brielle, aka my new obsesion. bc there is no posts of her. hc soon maybbee
Seaweed touch
A Brielle x reader fic ( preview)
Postmaster uses they/them and is rather detached bc of the insanity bit.
( hc that we’ve waited multiple loops before we started getting storyline costumers for angst purposes. No plot, just ansgt.)
The post officer had stoped counting weeks. It had been many, their memories of their first few weeks had begun blurring like the fog in their customer window.
The post officer had just sat down to begin stamping letters for the day after the last customer had dropped off a package when the bell rang again.
They hoped this customer was normal. Whatever passed for normal here. The last one had dropped off a wet package that wouldn't dry!
The feeling of it was awful. They didn't even need there letter opener to open it, the cardboard has practically crumpled on their hand.
Their hand still felt slimy! They'd have to make sure to take a nice long shower once their mandatory relaxation time started.
They put their stamp down and went to greet the customer.
There was a women at the door with short hair and a rough face. she seemed strong, with veins showing beneath her arms and neck.
"Here to drop of a package." She said as she slid a package through the box. They looked at it as it dropped down to the side of the window.
It was a big one, and would be a pain to pack into the truck with how many explosives they'd received today. ( why did the people here think sending volatile and dangerous substances through the mail was a good idea? It really, really wasn't.)
They turned to take the package to stamp it, expecting the women to leave. She didn't. costumers always left after dropping off their packages or item. This was the first time one had stayed. It was odd. ( it was exhilarating. It was Change.)
Liv didn’t let me romance Brielle
Sobbing and crying
I’m now going to make a new save and attempt to figure out how to romance sedna and then get them two together bc yeah. And then I’ll go back to other save so yeahhhhh.
letter lost
Okayyyy so I was playing letter lost ( brand new game that’s is sooooo worth my money )
And BRIELLE! I love her, adore her and her snarky ass attitude from her very few voice lines and uhhh, I’ve certainly got nothing straight to say about her design.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
CaptainRezaria is playing Letter Lost
Letter Lost: Unraveling Secrets Under the Post Office
Letter Lost single-player turns a post office simulation office job into a strange mystery game on Linux and Windows. FlatNine Games keeps bringing strange, smart ideas to life. Which you can find on Steam with a launch discount. Letter Lost sounds cozy for about five seconds, then the dungeon under the post office starts to matter. This new post office simulation launches on Steam with native Linux and Windows support, giving PC players a weird, dark mystery about mail, secrets, and escape.
A Normal Job, Except Not Really
You wake up under the post office on Kharnym Isle. There is a bed and cracked stone walls. There are scratch marks you are very clearly meant to ignore. That is the hook, and honestly, it rules. Letter Lost comes from independent developer FlatNine. It is the studio’s debut title, which makes this launch feel even sharper. After about two and a half years in development, the team has finally pushed its strange little mailroom nightmare.
Letter Lost Has Native Support
For Tux players, this is the big part. Letter Lost is launching on Linux. This is not a case where we have to cross our fingers and hope Proton behaves. The source confirms native support right at launch. Steam Deck support or Steam Deck verification has not been confirmed in the source, so Deck owners should check the Steam page before buying. Still, a native version is always nice to see. It gives players a cleaner starting point. It also matters to people who want more games to treat Linux as a real PC platform. No benchmarks or frame-rate targets to compare. System requirements are on the Steam page. So there is no reason to invent performance talk here. What we can say is simple: Letter Lost is a new release with confirmed support.
Mail Sorting With Bad Vibes
The setup is simple in the best way. You are the only employee at the Kharnym Isle Post Office. Your job is to stamp, sort, and deliver mail. Letters and packages need the right address. Then they go into the mail chute. Stamp. Sort. Deliver. Repeat. That sounds calm. Maybe even cozy. Then the gameplay starts nudging you toward the wrong drawer. The locked space. The weird switch. The resident who knows too much. The letter you probably should not open. And yes, you can open the mail. The gameplay makes it clear that this is not allowed. It also knows curiosity is stronger than rules. That is where the mystery starts to bite.
Letter Lost | Official Trailer
The Island Has Secrets
Kharnym Isle is not just a backdrop. It is full of residents, stories, and strange little threads to pull. You can keep your head down and do the job. You can also talk to people and read what was never meant for you. Due to dig into the island’s lore and secrets. The game is built around choice. You can listen to Liv, your supervisor on the old rotary phone. Ignore her, act like a perfect employee, or become the most nosy postal worker alive. Those choices shape the story. FlatNine says Letter Lost includes multiple endings, more than a dozen story lines, collectables, and several secrets. That gives it the kind of replay value mystery fans love. It also means one run may not show you the whole picture.
A Long Shift at the Post Office
A single playthrough is due to last 10 to 15 hours. Completionists can expect more than 20 hours if they want every hidden secret. That is a strong size for a story-rich indie release. It is not trying to be endless. It sounds more like a focused mystery box with a lot tucked inside. The post office itself also sounds packed with things to poke at. Drawers, switches, puzzles, and odd details all seem to matter. That kind of design can be great on PC, where small interactions and environmental clues feel right at home.
The Radio Might Keep You Company
Letter Lost also has a strange audio side. There are eight radio channels and several phonograph records to find. Some channels are silly. One has all-day yodeling. Another plays songs about sleep or rain. There are also talk radio programs with voices from fans, streamers, and content creators. That is a fun touch. It gives the office a sense of life, even when the job feels trapped and wrong. A glowing Steam Deck screen late at night, a quiet room, and a weird radio station in the background sounds like the right mood for this one. Just remember, Steam Deck support itself has not been confirmed.
A Small Team Gets Its Launch Day
FlatNine sounds ready for players to finally see what has been hiding behind the counter. “After about 2.5 years in development, we’re beyond excited to finally be able to give our fans a glimpse into what’s really going on at their permanent place of work,” said Harrison Wade, Co-Founder of FlatNine. He also teased new customers, maybe even a workmate, and the chance to choose how you spend “the rest of your eternal career” at a totally normal post office. That line gets the tone across fast. The Letter Lost gameplay wants to be funny, strange, and unsettling all at once.
Letter Lost Is Worth Playing
Letter Lost post office simulation launches on Steam for Linux and Windows at $17.99 USD / £15.97 / 18,44€, with the 10% launch discount. That makes it an easy one to flag for Linux game searches, especially for players who like odd simulators, mystery, and psychological horror. It has no confirmed Steam Deck status in the source, and no shared performance numbers yet. So check those details before you jump in on handheld.
Hey everyone,
I did some of the writing for Letter Lost, which came out today. It's a fun mystery/horror game where you're sending mail on a strange little island while trying to figure out exactly what is happening around you.
If it's sounds like something up your alley, please check it out and leave a review! If it does well enough, I might get to help out with the next game too!
You’re the sole employee at the Kharnym Isle post office, stamping, sorting, and delivering mail. But the job hides secrets, and the office
Edit: 10% off for the first two weeks!