Kamla Mod Apk 1.75 [Unlocked]

| Name | Kamla |
|---|---|
| Updated | 13 Jun 2026 |
| Version | 1.75 |
| Category | Action > Games |
| Size | 300.3 MB |
| Requires Android | Varies with device |
| Developer | MadMantra |
| Google Play | com.madmantragames.kamla |
| ApkModCT Downloads | 114 |
A possessed woman stalks the rooms of a crumbling mansion in rural 1980s India, and the Tantrik priest sent to save her has to search every corner for ritual items while she hunts him down. Kamla resists the exorcism with violence. Hide when she’s aggressive, grab the sacred objects you need, and piece together the ritual before she corners you in a dead-end hallway. The modded version hands you everything unlocked from the start, so you’re not replaying the same tense sequences just to access the Nightmare Mode content. But even with all the tools available, the mansion still has those narrow third-floor corridors where closets are scarce.
Drawers, Furniture, Puzzles That Lock Rooms
You’re opening drawers, checking behind furniture, and solving puzzles that gate off entire rooms. And each ritual item is hidden somewhere specific, and Kamla doesn’t pause while you’re rifling through cabinets. The puzzles aren’t complicated, but they demand attention at the worst possible moments. The sound design makes every footstep feel like it’s right behind you, even when she’s two rooms away.
She’s Faster When You’re Not Looking
Kamla’s behavior shifts between passive wandering and full aggression. The tells are subtle. When the demon takes control, hiding becomes the only option. Closets, beds, corners that break line of sight. The priest has no weapons, no counter moves, just speed and the ability to duck out of view. And holding onto the items you’ve already collected while scrambling for cover creates this awkward tension where you’re managing inventory in real time. Sometimes you drop a candle reaching for a closet door.
Worn Furniture, Faded Wallpaper, Rural Isolation
The mansion recreates a specific time and place with worn furniture, faded wallpaper, and ambient sounds that lean into rural isolation. It’s not flashy, but the atmosphere is consistent. And the 1980s setting isn’t just window dressing; it shapes the pacing, the lack of modern shortcuts, the reliance on old-world ritual logic. Nightmare Mode makes Kamla more persistent and the hiding spots less forgiving, but the same upstairs bathroom still only has one functional closet.



