Vex 6 Unblocked: The Mirrors Want Your Google Account

July 09, 2026 • César Daniel Barreto

Vex 6 is free, it’s official, and it doesn’t want anything from you. The mirrors that rank for “Vex 6 unblocked” want your email address, and some want your Google account.

That’s the trade nobody spells out. Here’s the game, the controls, and what the portals are actually charging you.

What Vex 6 is

You’re a stickman. You run, jump, slide, and cling to walls. Levels are called Acts, and each one is a corridor of spinning saws, spikes and platforms that vanish under your feet.

You will die constantly. That’s the design. The developers describe it as “jump, dodge, fail, learn, and jump again,” and the reason people replay it for a decade is that the deaths feel like your fault. Your timing. Your jump. Never the game.

The official home is vex.game/vex-6. It’s an HTML5 page. No plugin, no download, no account.

Who actually makes it

This part gets copied wrong everywhere. Most guides credit a solo developer and a publisher called AGame.

The series’ own about page tells a different story: Vex 3 migrated from Flash to HTML5 and joined the Azerion portfolio, and from Vex 4 onward the series has been produced by Azerion’s in-house studio. Their contact address is vex[at]azerion.com. Vex 6 is a studio game, not a bedroom project.

The early Flash-era attribution to an independent creator may well be true — it’s just not something Azerion says anywhere, so I’m not going to state it as fact.

And it isn’t the newest one

Guides ranking for this keyword will tell you Vex 7 is the latest entry. It isn’t. Vex 8 exists — it has its own page on the official site, and the homepage links to it exactly as prominently as Vex 7.

The tricky part is that mirror portals rarely update. They still push Vex 6 because Vex 6 is what people search for, and people search for Vex 6 because that’s what the portals show them. The loop feeds itself.

Controls

Four inputs. That’s the whole game.

  • Move — A and D, or the arrow keys
  • Jump — W, up arrow, or spacebar
  • Slide — S or down arrow, while running
  • Wall jump — jump into a wall, then jump again

The slide is the move new players never use. It’s not just for ducking under a low blade — it carries your momentum, and in the later Acts a sliding entry into a gap is the only way through. Practise tapping it mid-sprint until it stops feeling like a separate button.

The wall jump is the one that separates people who finish Act 5 from people who don’t. It has a rhythm: jump, touch, jump. Not jump, hold, jump. If you’re mashing, you’re falling.

Checkpoints, and the mistake everyone makes

Flags along the route are checkpoints. Run through one and it activates. Die, and you restart from the last one you touched.

What most people miss is that you can run past a flag while airborne and never trigger it. You’ll notice this at the worst possible moment — forty seconds into a clean run, dying to a saw, and reappearing two rooms back. Touch the ground at every flag. It costs you a quarter of a second.

What the “unblocked” sites actually want

Here’s where it stops being about wall jumps.

I loaded Vex 6 on one of the big Spanish-language portals that ranks for this game. The listing showed 276,038 plays and a 3.8 rating from 2,075 votes, so this is not some obscure corner of the web. Before long, this appeared:

A game portal signup modal asking the player to create an account with Google or with an email address, username and password, in order to save Vex 6 progress
A Vex 6 mirror asking for a Google account, or an email, username and password, in exchange for saving your progress. The official site asks for none of it. Screenshot: Minijuegos.

Sign up “to improve your progress and get all the achievements.” Continue with Google, or hand over an email, a username and a password.

Think about what’s on offer. You’re being asked to link a Google account — the one attached to your school email, your documents, your everything — to a browser game you’ll play for eleven minutes. On a game that is free and account-free at its own official URL.

I’m not saying that portal is malicious. It’s an ad-funded business doing an ad-funded business thing. I’m saying the price isn’t zero, and nobody writing “Vex 6 unblocked” guides mentions it.

The rest of the risk

Ad-funded game portals sell inventory to whichever broker pays most, and that’s the same pipe malvertising travels down. You don’t have to click anything — a hostile creative loads in an iframe and starts probing your browser.

We’ve written about how classic games get used in malware campaigns, and the same logic we applied to PolyTrack’s mirrors and to Sandboxels applies here without modification.

The rule stays the same: never install a browser extension to play a browser game, and never reuse a real password on a game portal. If a mirror asks for either, close the tab.

Try the official site first. Seriously.

vex.game has no “unblocked” or “games” in the domain. Filters that work by category often let it straight through, and it’s the newest build with nothing between you and the stickman.

If your school has blocked it specifically, that’s a decision someone made about your device. A mirror doesn’t undo that decision. It just adds an ad network and a signup form to your lunch break.

Getting better, quickly

Watch the empty corridors. A long, clean stretch with nothing in it is not a rest. It’s a setup. The Vex games hide traps precisely where your guard drops.

Stop improvising after the third death. If a section has killed you three times, you don’t have a reflex problem, you have a plan problem. Stand still, watch the trap cycle twice, then move.

Do one thing per run. First run through an Act, survive. Don’t chase coins. Go back for them once you know where the saws are.

Momentum is the whole game. Vex rewards not stopping. Most gaps that look unjumpable are trivially jumpable at full sprint, and impossible from standing.

The short version

Open vex.game. Play Vex 6 if that’s what you came for, then look at Vex 8, because it exists and nobody told you.

And if a page asks you to sign in with Google so it can save your stickman’s progress, ask yourself what it’s really saving.

César Daniel Barreto, Cybersecurity Author at Security Briefing

César Daniel Barreto

César Daniel Barreto is an esteemed cybersecurity writer and expert, known for his in-depth knowledge and ability to simplify complex cyber security topics. With extensive experience in network security and data protection, he regularly contributes insightful articles and analysis on the latest cybersecurity trends, educating both professionals and the public.

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