The most likely way to play these games on Android is through fan-made ports, often hosted on platforms like GameJolt or via community-driven itch.io pages.
The dream wasn't dead, however. On July 17, 2018, Nikson surprised the community by revealing a teaser trailer for an official remake at the end of an anniversary Q&A. This remake, Those Nights at Fredbear's: Reboot , promised new graphics, a new story, and new characters. The gameplay was shifted, with players taking control of a little girl who wakes up in a ball pit and must escape the diner, using glowsticks to see in the dark and avoiding animatronics like Springbonnie and Fredbear. Ultimately, like its predecessor, the reboot was also discontinued.
They called it a nostalgia pit—half arcade, half shrine—barely holding itself together on the corner where neon gave up and the suburbs started rusting. Fredbear 39’s Android was the sort of place that smelled like burnt pizza, machine oil, and a handful of forgotten birthdays. The sign—an animated Fredbear face with one LED eye flickering—had been there longer than most of the staff. For a while, people came for the cheap games and the cheap thrills. For a while, it felt like a refuge for kids who liked to stay late and parents who were too tired to argue about bedtimes.
For fans of the Five Nights at Freddy's (FNAF) franchise, the name "Fredbear" carries a heavy weight. As the original mascot and the centerpiece of the infamous "Bite of '83," Fredbear represents the dark, mysterious origins of the entire series' lore. Among the countless fan games that have tried to explore this terrifying origin, one stands out as a legendary, almost mythical project: .