Clipboard manager for macOS which does one job - keep your copy history at hand. Period.
Lightweight. Open source. No fluff.
Ambition and Rough Edges There are clear signs this is v0.8—and that’s part of the character. Systems sometimes squeak: pathfinding will spasm, a quest may loop in on itself, and a UI tooltip can read like an in-joke between devs. But those imperfections rarely feel like bugs as much as features of a game trying to be lived-in rather than polished into oblivion. When the balance wobbles, it does so theatrically: enemy encounters spike without warning, and an environmental hazard can turn a stroll into a trial by fire. These moments test patience, but they also forge stories—gritty anecdotes you retell to other players as badges of honor.
GrimDark’s latest release, Masters of Raana v0.8.3.4 T4, arrives like a fever dream translated into code—half arthouse horror, half uncompromising dungeon crawl. It’s rough at the edges, deliberately unfinished in places, and all the more intoxicating for it. This is not a game that holds your hand; it is a bruise you wear proudly.
Who Might Frustrate If you need pristine polish, immediate clarity, and linear certainty, this build will bruise your patience. Expect technical hiccups and balance spikes. The game rewards curiosity and tolerance for ambiguity; it can punish tunnel-minded optimization. Also, the deliberate opacity of some mechanics means newcomers might need extra time to find their footing. Masters Of Raana -v0.8.3.4 T4 - By GrimDark
Art and Audio Visually, Raana leans into a palette of metallic bruises—ocher, oxidized teal, and the acid flare of neon. Environments are layered, built from overlapping silhouettes and texture. It’s not prettified grime; it’s a city that has earned every stain. The soundtrack is sparse where it needs to be—low, pulsing synths that swell into noisy crescendos during set-pieces. Ambient sound design is exceptional: a distant generator cough, the metallic chime of a tram, a conversation swallowed by rain—these elements combine to make the audio feel tactile.
Narrative and Characters The writing is its own weather system—bleak, mordant, and frequently lyrical. Dialogues are compact and suggestive; NPCs often reveal more by what they omit than what they say. The player character is intentionally porous, a vessel whose past is hinted at in burned photographs and half-memorized songs. Side characters are the game’s crown jewels: a clockmaker who trades in regrets, a cultist who collects apologies, a smuggler whose charm is a sharpened blade. Even minor encounters carry moral friction; you rarely feel purely righteous choosing either option. Ambition and Rough Edges There are clear signs this is v0
Who Will Love This Masters of Raana will sing to players who relish atmospheric, emergent storytelling and don’t require every system to be spoon-fed. If you like games where the map reads like a detective’s whiteboard and where failures become narrative currency, this will feel like a secret handshake. Roleplayers who favor improvisation, modders who enjoy pushing glitches into new uses, and narrative hunters who savor implication over exposition will find themselves at home.
Mechanics and Systems Underneath the grime, there’s a nervous, cleverly gnarly mechanical heart. The combat is tactical in the way a knife fight is tactical: fast, dirty, and intimate. Weaponry feels distinct and purposeful; a blunt instrument staggers differently than a precision-backed stiletto, and the game rewards learning those subtleties rather than gating you behind stats alone. The resource economy is lean—scrap, whispered currencies, favors—and forces choices that feel consequential. The progression trees are non-linear, favoring bricolage over optimization. You’ll fashion tools by cobbling parts, or repurpose cursed artifacts whose benefits always come with teeth. When the balance wobbles, it does so theatrically:
Verdict Masters of Raana v0.8.3.4 T4 is imperfectly brilliant: an evocative, uncompromising experience that trades accessibility for depth of mood. GrimDark has built more than a game here—it’s constructed a living, breathing civic pathology you’ll willingly descend into. In a year of safe bets and tempered sequels, Raana is the kind of audacious, half-broken thing that reminds you why you fell for games in the first place. Play it for the atmosphere; stay for the stories you’ll only get by getting your hands dirty.
Maccy is hands down the best clipboard manager I've ever used, across all platforms! As a writer by profession, I cannot function effectively without a clipboard manager. All the apps I tried from the App Store or elsewhere were not bloated and required unnecessary permissions. Maccy is lean and clean yet feature packed!
If you are looking for a clipboard manager with a modern design and UI, you should check out Maccy. Though very simple and has a minimal system footprint, Maccy gets the job done. More importantly, Maccy is free, lightweight, and open-source.
About two weeks into using Maccy, I began to realise I couldn't do without it - not only as a Mac clipboard manager, but as a very minimalist note taker and a security blanket from silly mistakes. It stays out of the way, is super fast, and does exactly what it needs to.
Maccy does exactly what it should do, in the simplest way. That's why I like it. Lightweight, performant and open source, it's all I want from a Mac clipboard manager.