Five Nights at Treasure Island

Five Nights at Treasure Island logo with Mickey ears on a dark glitchy background

Five Nights at Treasure Island (FNaTI) is one of the oldest and most iconic FNAF fan games ever created. Originally started in December 2014 and inspired by the "Abandoned by Disney" creepypasta, it places you in an abandoned Disney resort where distorted, possessed Disney characters — known as "toons" — come to life and hunt you down. The 2020 remake by Radiance Team transformed what was once an unfinished demo into a fully polished, atmospheric horror experience with tight mechanics and a deeply unsettling presentation. You play as Jake Smith, a university student sent by the Supernatural Studies Association to investigate Treasure Island — completely unaware of the dark secrets lurking within.

Download Five Nights at Treasure Island Free
Feature Details
DeveloperRadiance Team (originally by Anart1996)
PlatformsWindows PC, Android
GenreSurvival Horror / Point-and-Click
Structure5 Nights + Night 6 (Boss) + Pirate Caverns + Custom Night
Version1.2.23 (Full Release)
PriceFree
Five Nights at Treasure Island camera system overview showing 10-camera grid with power indicator at 98% Photo Negative Mickey spotted on camera in a storage room, Night 1 at 3AM with power at 64% Player office in Five Nights at Treasure Island with desk, CRT monitor, Mickey doll, and Oswald lurking in the corner

Download Five Nights at Treasure Island

FNaTI is available as a free download for Windows PC. Version 1.2.23 (Full Release).

Download for PC (Mega)

How to Install Five Nights at Treasure Island

Windows
  1. Download the file from the link above (817 MB)
  2. Extract the contents to a folder of your choice
  3. Run the .exe file to start the game
  4. If Windows SmartScreen blocks it, click "More info" then "Run anyway"

What Makes Five Nights at Treasure Island Special

The premise alone sets FNaTI apart from every other FNAF fan game. Instead of a pizza restaurant, you're stationed inside an abandoned Disney resort — a crumbling theme park attraction where the air feels heavy and wrong. The "animatronics" here aren't robots at all. They're toons: ink-like entities that take the shape of distorted Disney characters and move through the building with unnatural purpose. Photo Negative Mickey, Oswald, The Face, Acephalus — each one is a warped reflection of something once cheerful, now deeply unsettling.

The atmosphere is where FNaTI truly excels. Radiance Team built a soundscape that keeps you on edge every second — old-timey music drifting through empty halls, ambient creaks, distant shuffling. Random events like glowing eyes appearing in your office or brief glimpses of Mortimer Mouse and Suicide Mouse keep you paranoid even during quieter moments. It's the kind of horror that doesn't rely on jump scares alone but rather the persistent feeling that something is profoundly wrong with this place.

Five Nights at Treasure Island Gameplay

Five Nights at Treasure Island gameplay video

Gameplay Mechanics

FNaTI is built around three core mechanics that deliberately conflict with each other, forcing you into tense split-second decisions where every choice feels like a gamble.

Disable Cameras

Your office has a 10-camera monitoring system. When a toon enters your office, you must disable a camera to generate noise and lure it back to its original position. But each disabled camera stays offline for 30 seconds or more, creating blind spots across the building. Disable too many too quickly and you'll have no idea where anything is — or worse, no cameras left to use when you need them most.

Stand Still

By pressing Control, Jake freezes completely in place. This is the only way to deal with Acephalus and Undying — they'll leave if you stay perfectly still. The catch? While frozen, you can't access cameras or any other defense. If another toon shows up while you're standing still, you're completely exposed.

Lights Out

Pressing Shift kills all lights and cameras in the office, which is the only way to make The Face leave. Like FNAF 1, your power drains constantly, and turning off the lights slows the drain. But abuse this mechanic and the light bulb will physically explode, leaving you in permanent darkness for the rest of the night — completely defenseless.

These three systems are designed to clash. Standing still prevents you from disabling cameras. Turning off lights blocks the monitor. Disabling a camera leaves you vulnerable to enemies that require different mechanics entirely. The result is a gameplay loop that feels genuinely stressful — every move you make leaves you open to something else.

The Toons

Camera feed showing a dark room inside the abandoned resort with red recording indicator Camera view of a foggy, dimly lit hallway inside Treasure Island

Night 6 and Beyond

Hourglass — The Final Boss

Night 6 throws out the entire rulebook. Every toon from the previous nights is replaced by a single entity: Hourglass, an amalgamation of all the characters fused into one nightmarish form. What makes Hourglass terrifying is that its behavior depends on which camera it appears on — it mimics Mickey on cameras 3 and 4 (disable a camera), The Face on camera 9 (turn off lights), and Acephalus on cameras 5 and 8 (stand still). You need to constantly check cameras to know which mechanic to use, and Hourglass gets faster with every passing hour. It's widely considered one of the most intense nights in any FNAF fan game.

Pirate Caverns

After nights 3 and 6, the game shifts to point-and-click exploration sections set in underground caverns beneath the island. You're searching for Henry, a fellow SSA intern who got trapped during an earlier investigation. Armed with a flashlight, you navigate dark tunnels, use flash to ward off The Face, and stay still when Undying appears. The atmosphere in these sections is hauntingly effective — crumbling walls, eerie silence, and disturbing messages scrawled on surfaces. After completing Night 6, a hidden code (3497) unlocks a secret animation studio deep in the caverns where the true nature of the island is revealed.

Extra Content

Pirate Caverns first-person exploration with flashlight, Mickey warning sign, and battery indicator Pirate Caverns second floor with old CRT monitor on a desk illuminated by flashlight

What the Community Says

FNaTI has earned a devoted following and widespread praise from both English and Spanish-speaking FNAF communities. Here's what reviewers had to say:

One prominent reviewer described it as going "from being a game I fondly remembered in my childhood to being my absolute favorite fan game ever made. Everything about its disturbing presentation to its tight and stressful mechanics to its story and characters made me love this game every second I played it."

Another called it "one of if not my very favorite fan game of all time," praising "the mechanics, the visuals, the character designs, the variation in cutscenes, the occasional post-night game mode, an entire legacy version of the game included, a well-structured custom night and overall difficulty balancing."

A Spanish reviewer highlighted the cultural significance: "Es un tributo hecho con puro amor hacia uno de los fangames más clásicos que no pudieron tener jamás una conclusión satisfactoria, y la verdad que Radiance Team hizo justicia al legado de este juego" — calling it a tribute made with pure love, giving Radiance Team credit for doing justice to the game's legacy. He rated it a solid 7 out of 10.

The game has also appeared in multiple "best FNAF fan games for Android" rankings, consistently placing in the top 4.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Five Nights at Treasure Island free?
Yes, FNaTI is completely free to download and play. It was created as a non-profit fan project by Radiance Team.
Is there an Android version?
Yes, Five Nights at Treasure Island has an Android port. Reviewers note that the mobile version holds up well against the PC version. However, at this time only the PC download link is available through our site.
How is this different from the original 2014 game?
The 2020 remake by Radiance Team is a complete overhaul of the original unfinished demo by Anart1996. It features entirely new graphics, a full story with cutscenes, redesigned mechanics, 6 main nights, Pirate Caverns exploration sections, a Custom Night with exclusive characters, and multiple difficulty modes. The original 2014 version is included as "Classic Mode" within the remake.
What is Hourglass?
Hourglass is the final boss of Night 6 — an amalgamation of all the toon characters fused into one entity. Its behavior changes depending on which camera it appears on, requiring you to use all three of the game's mechanics (disable cameras, stand still, turn off lights) to survive. It's widely considered one of the hardest and most intense encounters in any FNAF fan game.
Is this connected to Oblitus Casa?
Yes. Five Nights at Treasure Island serves as the narrative foundation for its sequel, Oblitus Casa, also developed by Radiance Team. The story and lore introduced in FNaTI — particularly the mystery of Mother and the toons — continues directly in Oblitus Casa.
How long does it take to beat?
The main 5 nights plus Night 6 can be completed in a few hours. Adding the Pirate Caverns sections, Classic Mode, Custom Night, and the Nightmare/True Nightmare challenges, completionists can expect to spend considerably more time uncovering everything the game has to offer.

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