Console commands, admin/RCON commands, and cheat codes for 31 games — plus 179 ARK: Survival Ascended creature spawn commands. Verified against the current patch, copy-paste ready, no login. Search for a game or a creature and jump straight to it.
Searches every game and every ARK creature by name.
Pick any creature and every Copy hands you that exact cheat summon / GMSummon command at the level you set — no editing. Set color regions, gender, saddle, and stats, then copy the finished command. Each creature has its own page with a render and full command table.
Console commands are the fastest way to fix a stuck quest, spawn the item you’re missing, teleport past a broken bit of terrain, or test a server change without grinding for it. The problem is never the command — it’s finding the current one. Half the results are for a version three patches back, the syntax is subtly wrong, and nobody says whether it needs cheats enabled first.
This hub fixes that. Every command page on GamesOMG is verified against the game’s current patch, cross-checked against the official wiki or dev docs, and dated so you know how fresh it is. Client-side cheats, admin/RCON commands for servers you run, and the exact key that opens each console — all on one page per game, searchable and copy-paste ready.
31 games covered, 1,279 commands in total. A few of the deepest: Soulmask (134 admin commands), SCUM, Vintage Story, Empyrion, and Factorio. The classics are here too — Skyrim, Rust, Valheim, Terraria, the Fallout line, and Cyberpunk 2077. Each page groups commands by what you actually want to do (client cheats, spawning, world/time, admin), not one giant alphabetical dump.
ARK gets its own treatment because "the command" isn’t enough — you want a specific creature, at a specific level, sometimes a specific color or a tamed one. The ARK Spawn Commands builder covers 179 creatures, each with its own page: pick a level and copy the exact cheat summon or GMSummon command, or open the builder to set color regions, gender, saddle, and stats. Popular ones like the Rex, Giganotosaurus, Wyvern, and Argentavis are one tap from the search box above.
Two different things that people lump together. Console (client) commands run from your own game console — the F1/tilde/backtick bar — and cover cheats, spawns, and debug in single-player or a listen game. Admin or RCON commands run against a dedicated server you own: kicks, bans, saves, broadcasts, wipes, world control. Most pages here cover both and clearly label which is which, plus how to open the console and grant yourself admin in the first place. If you host the server, our config generators and setup guides pair with these.
Console (or "client") commands run from your own game console — things like noclip, god mode, item spawns, and time/weather in a single-player or listen game. Admin/RCON commands run against a dedicated server you own: kicks, bans, saves, broadcasts, and world control. Most pages here cover both and label which is which, plus how to open the console and grant yourself admin.
Yes. Every command page is verified against the game’s current patch and cross-checked against the official wiki or dev docs (the source and date are printed on each page). When a game renames or removes a command, the page gets updated. Spot something stale? Send it via the contact page and it gets fixed.
Each ARK creature has its own page with a live builder: pick a level and every Copy button hands you that exact cheat summon / GMSummon command — no editing. You can also set color regions, gender, saddle, and stats, then copy the finished command. Start from the ARK Spawn Commands builder or jump straight to a creature via search above.
Depends on the command. Client/console commands go into your in-game console (the page tells you which key opens it). Admin commands go into the server console or an RCON tool for a server you run. Spawn and give commands usually need cheats or admin enabled first — each page spells out the prerequisite.
The list grows toward games with real self-hosting or single-player command communities and a command set that’s painful to dig up. Drop a request via the contact page — repeatedly-asked games move up the queue.