>They're hunting people.
The unsourced screen caps are from
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Most_Dangerous_Game
which has some interesting/useful further sources and links.
Film
The Most Dangerous Game (1932) was produced by RKO Pictures and is the first major film adaption of the original work[1][2]
A Game of Death (1945), directed by Robert Wise and produced by RKO Pictures, changes Zaroff into "Erich Kreiger", a Nazi, and is set in the aftermath of World War II[3][4][2]
Run for the Sun (1956) stars Richard Widmark, Trevor Howard and Jane Greer[5][6][2]
Bloodlust! (1961) was directed by Ralph Brooke and stars Wilton Graff as the Zaroff-type character, and Robert Reed as the leader of a band of youths who become stranded on the island[7][2]
Confessions of a Psycho Cat (1968), an early sexploitation film taking place in New York City. Zaroff is replaced with a woman known as Virginia Marcus (played by Eileen Lord) who offers three acquitted murderers $100,000 if they can survive a night of her hunting them down. It takes little from The Most Dangerous Game apart from the concept of hunting humans for sport.[8]
The Woman Hunt (1972) stars John Ashley and Sid Haig and was made for Roger Corman's New World Pictures. The Woman Hunt is an unofficial remake of the story.[9][2]
The Suckers (1972) tells a sexploitation version of the story, with the hunter using models as his prey[10]
Slave Girls from Beyond Infinity (1987) transports the story to an alien world using scantily-clad women as the hunted and a mad scientist, Zed, as the Zaroff character[11][12][2]
Deadly Prey (1987) tells the story of a former soldier who is kidnapped by mercenaries who train by hunting innocent people.[13]
Hard Target (1993) shifts the location to 1990s New Orleans, with homeless Vietnam war veterans voluntarily serving (in return for potential payment from a shady businessman) as human prey[14][2]
Surviving the Game (1994), directed by Ernest Dickerson and starring Rutger Hauer, Ice-T, and Charles S. Dutton, depicts a homeless man who is hired as a survival guide for a group of wealthy businessmen on a hunting trip in the mountains[15][2]
The Pest (1997) is a comedic parody of the story, with German huntsman Gustav Shank accidentally bringing Puerto Rican teenage hustler Pestario "Pest" Vargas to his island instead of the skilled man he had intended to hunt, only to decide to hunt the Pest anyway due to his sheer obnoxiousness[16][2]
The Eliminator (2004) shows seven captured people who are hunted at night for sport on an island as a betting game for the wealthy[2]
Beyond the Reach (2014) depicts a young man who witnesses a hunter inadvertently kill someone must run from the killer. It was a remake of the 1974 television film Savages.[citation needed]
Tremors: Island Fury (2020) follows Burt Gummer and several other unlucky people who are trapped on an island with a trophy hunter, who hunts graboids for sport.[17][18]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adaptations_of_The_Most_Dangerous_Game