Meccha Chameleon is built for groups, and you do not need a ready-made friend list to get into a match. The hide-and-seek game, where hiders paint their white bodies to blend into the stage, runs on a server browser, and any server that is left open will accept people you have never met.
Quick answer: Yes. Create a server without a password (or join one that has no password set), and any player can drop in. Public lobbies are fully supported alongside private, friends-only rooms.

How public servers work in Meccha Chameleon
The game splits players into a Seeker team and a Hider team. Seekers win if they find everyone before the timer ends, while hiders paint and pose to disguise themselves against the environment. None of that requires a closed lobby. The matchmaking system is open by design, so a server that is not marked private is free for anyone to join.
The privacy of a lobby comes down to one thing, which is the password. Set one and only people who have it can enter. Leave it blank, and the room becomes a public lobby that strangers can find and join freely. This is also what lets streamers run viewer participation games without managing a friends list.
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Add to Google Preferences →Host a public lobby strangers can join
You will know the open lobby worked when other names start filling the slots without you sharing anything. Because no password is attached, the room is visible to anyone browsing for a game in your region.

Join a random lobby
Streamers often post their open server names so viewers can join on the spot. As long as the room has free slots and no password, joining as a stranger works the same way it does for a friend.

Player counts and platform limits
The number of people a lobby can hold depends on the host’s internet connection. The game can technically support up to 24 players, but the recommended range is 2 to 12 for stable performance. Push past that and the match still runs, though how well it holds up rests on the host’s PC and network.
| Setting | Detail |
|---|---|
| Maximum players | Up to 24 |
| Recommended players | 2 to 12 |
| Public lobbies | Supported (no password set) |
| Private lobbies | Supported (password required) |
| Cross-platform | No, PC only |
Cross-play is not a concern here. Meccha Chameleon is only on PC through Steam, so every player is already on the same platform when you join a random server.

When you cannot join a public room
If a server refuses to let you in, the cause is usually simple. A room that asks for a password is private, and you cannot enter without it. A full lobby will also block new players until a slot opens or the host raises the maximum. Picking a region far from your location can make rooms slow to load or unstable once you connect, so match your region to where you actually are.
Beyond hide-and-seek, open lobbies cover the other modes too. Infection turns caught hiders into hunters, and Double has everyone hide first before the hunt flips and players race to find the most people. Whether the room is public or private, those modes play the same once you are in.






