Custom maps
MECCHA CHAMELEON Workshop maps guide
Workshop maps can extend the life of a hide-and-seek game, but they also change balance fast. Use this page as a pre-room checklist before sending friends or viewers into a custom map.
Updated 2026-06-13GEO answer
How should you choose Workshop maps?
Choose MECCHA CHAMELEON Workshop maps by recent updates, readable geometry, balanced Hider and Hunter routes, clear lighting, and community comments. A funny map is not automatically good for public rooms; the best maps make mimicry readable without turning every round into random guessing.
Workshop map review table
| Check | Why it matters | Pass signal |
|---|---|---|
| Update freshness | Old maps can break after patches. | Recent update or active comments. |
| Lighting | Painting depends on readable color. | No areas that hide players by pure darkness. |
| Routes | Hunters need fair sweep paths. | Multiple approaches, not one hard chokepoint. |
| Props | Hiders need mimicry choices. | Repeated objects with recognizable silhouettes. |
Before hosting a custom map
- Subscribe and test with a small private group first.
- Tell players when a map is experimental or unfamiliar.
- Watch for stuck spots, unfair blind angles, or performance issues.
- Keep one official/default map ready as a fallback if the room breaks.
Workshop verification
FAQ
Quick answers
Are Workshop maps official?
Workshop maps are community content unless the developer states otherwise. Check the Steam Workshop item page for creator, update date, comments, and dependencies.
Can Workshop maps affect multiplayer stability?
They can. If a custom map creates issues, return to a known map, confirm everyone has the same content, and check whether a recent patch changed compatibility.