понедельник, 2 июля 2018 г.

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xboxone. 11 851 пользователь находится здесь. МОДЕРАТОРЫ. Arowin Arowin MikeyJayRaymond Simple Rlight #teamchief _deffer_ deffer delicious_cheese DeliciousCheeze tobiasvl tobiasvl - #teamchief ClassyTurkey Enter Gamertag XboxCountdown XbotOne AutoModerator . и ещё 5 » Welcome to Reddit, the front page of the internet. and subscribe to one of thousands of communities. Это архивированный пост. Вы не можете голосовать или комментировать. отправлено 2 года назад автор IITeMp3sTII II TeMp3sT II. Want to add to the discussion? помощь правила сайта центр поддержки вики реддикет mod guidelines связаться с нами. приложенияи инструменты Reddit for iPhone Reddit for Android mobile website кнопки. Использование данного сайта означает, что вы принимаете пользовательского соглашения и Политика конфиденциальности. © 2018 reddit инкорпорейтед. Все права защищены. REDDIT and the ALIEN Logo are registered trademarks of reddit inc. π Rendered by PID 62942 on app-521 at 2018-02-01 20:48:40.730942+00:00 running 0e96928 country code: RU. GAMERS DECIDE. 10 Best Multiplayer Horror Games You Should Play With Your Buddies. Looking for a really good multiplayer horror game? It's time to start planning your multiplayer horror gaming sessions with your friends. Whether you want to fight along side your friends as you take on post-apocalyptic horrors though the power of team work or want to leave your friends in the dust as you prove who is the best gamer, check out the following games. 10. Don't Starve Together. Need a truly challenging survival game for you and your friends wrapped up in a whimsical package with Tim Burton-esque characters? Then Don't Starve Together is just what you need. This game is the multiplayer expansion of the game Don't Starve . It plays as a big sandbox where you and a friend will need to work together to survive in a world where everything is out to destroy you. As you play you'll quickly discover that each step uncovers a whole new danger. Players start the game with nothing, trying to get their basic needs covered like food and warmth at night. However, there are tons of other things that will need to be done to ensure survival. Keeping sane is just as important as staying full, players will need to make sure that they don't lose their minds either. Players need to build a base, farm, construct new items like clothing and weapons, craft spells, among many other things if they want to stand a chance. Sadly, there are no campfire songs. With a friend at your side you'll be able to complete tasks faster. What could have taken you days to complete on your own, like gathering more resources and fighting powerful foes, will be quickly and achieved. But surviving with a friend will prove to have its own challenges. In a world with fleeting resources how will you decide who gets to eat and you must starve. Don't Starve Together features various modes. One mode gives the player infinite lives and a starting position next to other survivors. Another mode will spawn players randomly and once your health runs out you'll be stuck in permadeath. This is when you turn into a ghost that can haunt creatures and objects. As a ghost you'll be risking the other player's sanity and lives. Resurrection is possible, but isn't messing with your friends more fun? 0% happy 0% inspired 0% amused 0% sad 0% angry 0% annoyed. Log in or register to post comments 364978 reads. GamersDecide newsletter. CONNECT WITH US. Top 20 GD Veterans. Copyright© 2017 GamersDecide Inc. All rights reserved. Looking Ahead to the Horror Games of 2015. The last handful of years haven’t treated some of gaming’s greatest horror franchises very well. Resident Evil lost its way a few times, Left 4 Dead 3 has been MIA, Dead Space and Alan Wake were put on hiatus — soon to be joined by F.E.A.R. — and until recently, Silent Hill was largely assumed dead. Looking at all that, you would think horror was fading into obscurity again. Thankfully, that’s not the case. Indie horror is healthier than ever, bolstered by several high profile releases like The Forest , Slender: The Arrival and Outlast as well as a number of upcoming games that are all worth getting excited about. We’ve begin to see this renewed interest affect AAA horror, starting with the imminent arrivals of Alien: Isolation and The Evil Within next month. That’s just the beginning. We have a veritable horde coming next year. If my guide to the remaining horror games of 2014 left you wanting, this (working) list of releases the genre has in store for us in 2015 should remedy that. Bloodborne. If you don’t mind being broken down over and over again by a game with a thoroughly unforgiving nature that goes a long way in making the occasional victory all the sweeter. Bloodborne promises to be as challenging as the Dark Souls series that inspired it, only now that winning formula has been injected with a dose of horror. Release Date: February 6, 2015. Call of Cthulhu. This past January, Magrunner: Dark Pulse developer Frogwares revealed their plan to make a new Call of Cthulhu . Since then, the game has kept unusually quiet. After the cancellation of the two sequels that were planned to follow Call of Cthulhu: Dark Corners of the Earth and the state of limbo that Guillermo Del Toro’s InSane has found itself in, I’m wondering if there isn’t some sort of curse that’s been put on any developer that tries to create a game based on or inspired by the works of H.P. Lovecraft. Release Date: TBA 2015. PC gamers have been able to experience the wonders of getting robbed by strangers at gunpoint over cans of beans for what feels like ages. Soon, PS4 owners will have the opportunity to experience that same joy. Release Date: TBA 2015. Trying to take a bite out of that juicy DayZ pie is H1Z1 . It’s more or less the same game, so if you like trying to survive in a post-apocalyptic wilderness where your fellow man is infinitely scarier than the walking dead, there’s a solid chance this game won’t disappoint. Release Date: January 15, 2015 (Steam Early Access) Dead Island 2. With Spec Ops: The Line developer Yager taking the reigns, I have faith they’ll be able to elevate this troubled series. Between its renewed focus on humor, over-the-top action and vibrant environments, Dead Island 2 is already doing a lot right. Release Date: Spring 2015. After several delays, Doom is coming. We might not have seen it yet, but there’s plenty of folks who have. If id Software’s refusal to place it under the scrutinizing eye of the Internet is any indication of its quality, this may end up being a 2016 release. Release Date: TBA 2015. The day before Halloween, indie developer Red Thread Games decided to give us something scary to look forward to with Draugen , a survival horror game that feels like Gone Home meets Amnesia: The Dark Descent . It’s set on the Norwegian west coast, so you can be sure it’s going to look ridiculously good. Release Date: TBA 2015. Dying Light. With Dead Island 2 in the hands of a new developer, Techland was left with some free time and a love for the undead. Rather than try something entirely new, the team is working on improving the foundation they created with the first Dead Island . The result is an incredibly ambitious game with a multiplayer that’s been seamlessly woven into the experience. And parkour. Lots of parkour. Release Date: January 27, 2015. The Evil Within: The Assignment. The Assignment , the first of three planned expansions for The Evil Within , will follow Sebastian’s partner, Juli “The Kid” Kidman. We don’t know much else about it yet, but I imagine there will be lots of blood, barbed wire and nightmarish creatures — including The Keeper, which has been confirmed for this DLC and the expansion that’s slated to follow it — for us to flee from. Release Date: Early 2015. Fatal Frame V: The Black Haired Shrine Maiden. This game bums me out. Part of me takes solace in knowing this beloved survival horror franchise isn’t being entirely neglected, but most of me is too busy being frustrated to notice. If ever there was a time to release a quality horror game like this to the world — not just Japan — it’s now. The only reason this game is on this list is because I hope Nintendo just hasn’t gotten around to mentioning an international release yet. Release Date: September 27, 2014 (Japan) / Possible 2015 release elsewhere. Originally announced as a last-gen console release, Techland gave us a substantial reason to be pumped for Hellraid when they confirmed it had been delayed to give them time to rebuild the game in a new engine for current-gen consoles. The new-and-improved Hellraid brings together the combat of Skyrim with the brutality of Dead Island , complete with a dark fantasy setting and tons of hellish monsters to battle. Release Date: TBA 2015. Killing Floor 2. Tripwire Interactive hasn’t mentioned an ETA for the sequel to their hit cooperative horror game Killing Floor . When I saw it in action last month, it looked like the game was pretty far along. The mechanics are in and the gore is top notch, but multiplayer games require a lot of tweaking to get the balance right, so I wouldn’t be surprised if Killing Floor 2 arrives early next year. Release Date: TBA 2015. Kodoku looks like a series of nightmares that were induced by a particularly bad acid trip. I have no idea what’s going on, but I like it. Release Date: TBA 2015. Let it Die. Despite being a fan of Suda 51’s wacky work and the worlds he’s created, I haven’t seen enough to get me enthusiastic about Let it Die . It could be a twisted ride that showers us with the blood spilled from our mostly naked enemies, or it could be shallow and use its copious amount of violence as a gimmick. We’ll have to wait and see! Release Date: TBA 2015. Resident Evil. I have two theories to explain why Capcom is re-releasing the Resident Evil remake. I’ve already gone into great detail on the first theory, but I haven’t even mentioned the other. My second theory revolves around the idea that Capcom is fully aware of our desire for a Resident Evil 2 remake, which they’ll get around to doing, but not before they every other Resident Evil first. Release Date: January 20, 2015. Resident Evil Revelations 2. Not long after Capcom announced they’d be remastering the GameCube remake, they also revealed a sequel to Revelations . Their decision to build on a spin-off that’s widely considered to be one of the best Resident Evil games of the last decade. We know it will be delivered episodically, feature offline co-op, is set on a prison island and stars Claire Redfield and Moira Burton — Barry Burton’s daughter. Last October, Amnesia developer Frictional Games started teasing their next project, the freaky looking horror game SOMA . Here we are a year later and the game is significantly less mysterious than it was back then. Even still, I can’t help but wonder if we’ve only scratched the surface. SOMA looks like a mystery wrapped in an enigma that’s been slathered in gore, modified corpses and face-eating robots. Release Date: Early 2015. State of Decay: Year One Survival Edition. State of Decay is one of the better zombie-themed video games we’ve been gifted with lately, and it’s undead hordes are slated to shamble onto the Xbox One in the near future. Other than the still glaring lack of co-op, what’s not to love about that? Release Date: Early 2015. The Order: 1886. The Order: 1886 is set in Victorian era London and follows an ancient order of soldiers with steampunk weapons and gadgets, and their ongoing war with human “half-breeds”, or werewolves. If that doesn’t have you sufficiently excited, I don’t know what will. Release Date: February 20, 2015. Human Element. Earlier this month we were treated to our very first look at the post-apocalyptic zombie survival game, Human Element . Much like The Walking Dead , the zombies aren’t the real threat — it’s your fellow man you should be worried about. Release Date: November 2015. Until Dawn. After going silent for a while, Sony re-revealed developer Supermassive Games’ teen slasher Until Dawn . It’s been improved in every way possible, including a complete reworking of the original script to make it exponentially more terrifying. This game has a lot of promise, and if it’s successful, it could pave the way for more games like it. Release Date: TBA 2015. Back in October, developer Red Barrels confirmed a sequel to Outlast , their popular first person horror game set in the Mount Massive asylum. If it’s anywhere near as scary as its predecessors, we’ll all need to stock up on Depends. Release Date: TBA 2015. Remember, this is a working list. 2015 is still a ways off and the unpredictable and always-changing nature of video games means a lot of the above will change, probably more than once, in the coming months. If I missed something, feel free to let me know in the comments. AROUND THE WEB. Bloodborne looks so freaking awesome. But I must admit that the thought of unforgiving gameplay makes me hesitate. I’ve never played Darksouls for one reason… And that’s the unforgiving nature of the series. But I have to have Bloodborne. It just looks too good. That’s exactly how I feel. I just think that I’ll spend more time being frustrated rather than having fun. I’ll probably wait until the reviews come around to see if I’ll for sure get it or not. It’s like gang initiation. The starting phase sucks. You get thrown around, you feel like human garbage but man oh man, once you’re in, YOU’RE IN! Or it’s like learning an instrument or riding a bike … or butt sex. You use the words “like Gone Home” as if that’s a good thing. That’s because it is, at least for me. Gone Home is fantastic. So much good stuff! I didn’t know there was a Lovecraft based game coming out, that’s pretty cool. Hopefully it’s good. Looking forward to Until Dawn and Dying Light the most. Here’s hoping Until Dawn is a success. Dying Light for the win! I hope is not as buggy as Dead Island! Also, Call of Cthulhu needs to happen now! And I totally want the whole Hellraid! Medieval horror is a must! You sir are absolutely correct. Can’t wait for both those games. Only one month till Dying Light! I can’t even wait for Slender the Arrival tomorrow on consoles. Really enjoyed that game on PC. Wow, lots to look forward to. Super keen for next year 🙂 Gonna have to get a PS4 me thinks. Bloodborne and Until Dawn look great! Update this for Outlast! Sweet… More blood, more guts, more flesh to explore. The beauty of suffering… I wouldn’t really call Let it Die a horror game at all, it is a brawler game that just happens to be one of the most violent games in the fighting genre, it isn’t really a survival horror either, it is just a survival game, but besides that, quite a good list, hoping to hear about Call of Cthulhu myself. Horror game doesn’t have to be survival horror, just like survival game doesn’t have to be horror. But yes, i agree with you: Let it Die is not a horror game, it’s violent slasher, blood and gore fest. And i’m waiting for new Call of Cthulhu too… Indeed, you are completely right on that, a good example of a survival game which isn’t a horror game is Rust…but anyways, I actually had forgotten about Call of Cthulhu….I’ll have to do some more research because I only talked about that game once and forgot about it…. Many of the games on the list does not seem like horror games to me. They actually are, maybe not Outlast-like horror, but they do fall into the horror genre, besides the already discussed Let it Die…I might argue The Order: 1886 is just a third-person shooter, but I’ve seen different people categorizing as some sort of horror game. I dont know that much of about most of these games but from the stuff i have seen they seem more to be action games with monster in them. No, that’s true. Most of “horror games” nowdays are… horror themed only… I’m weepy… I WANT SIREN BAAAAACK. Same here i love the Siren games and they are some of my favorite horror games ever. I hate that the Siren series seems to be dead and gone. Same with the Fear series, Condemned, Dead Space and the Fatal Frame games dont seem to get released outside Japan anymore. Also really wish we could get new Resident Evil games that are like the old horror classics again. Love all games you mentioned here, except RE (because of what Capcom has done with it: instead of making new, decent one they are squeezing green juice by dozen times re-releasing same games, naming it with bullshit “Super Duper Hyper Ultimate HD etc etc”)… Call of Cthulhu facebook page: Looking forward to Until Dawn and fucking Dying light! I’m really excited for DYING LIGHT, and Until dawn those 2 are high on my list!!Of course I’m getting my copy of the Resident Evil remake on PS4. To be honest tho The Order:1886 and BloodBorne look very promising, but i’m ready for the DLC for Evil Within. What’s awesome is that some of these will be coming to the Vita. There’s also a few more that weren’t listed. Just think, you can turn the lights off while you’re taking a duke and you’ve got the perfect spot to take a shit when something scares you! To this day, I’m still afraid of turning off the lights in the bathroom and taking a dump in the dark. We had a black out recently and I had to use the bathroom with one candle burning and with a heavy storm going on outside. I was the only one in the house at the time. It wasn’t fun at all. Wow, I didn’t know about another Call of Cthulhu game but now I’m hyped as hell! I’ve played “Dark Corners of Earth” and I really liked it, although it scared me to death! Silent Hill should of got a mention. The obscure demo they put out was was insane. I couldn’t agree more! Hell yeah, OUTLAST 2. I hope the TBA 2015 doesn’t mean it’s coming out in October of 2015 but I’m betting that’s going to be the case. Soma and Draugen sounds like it is going to be a terrifying experience. Resident Evil remake needs an graphic engine overhaul instead of a re-hash of the Gamecube one. It needs to be a fully functional 3D environment and none of that silly 90’s pre-rendered graphics. I just made a list and OUTLAST 2 IS COMING SOON! 😀 So no mention of Silent Hills? Really? I upvoted twice! That’s gonna be the best horror game up with Amnesia and Silent Hill 2 and 1. Silent Hills isn’t going to be released until 2016. That’s definitely been confirmed. Ah. I swore it was late 2015. Thanks for the heads up. SILENT HILLS. But considering this game might get a 2016 release! No Silent Hill games this year! 🙁 Broke my heart man 🙁 I would try and comfort you by saying another game is coming …. but no game compares to silent hill! 🙁 Yea man, I hope they start working on a new one soon. It’s been too long and ”Silent Hills” looked so promising. No silent hill game has failed to scare me yet, that’s why I like them so much! They always bring something new! It’d be nice to have a NEW horror to record! Yea man for the ps2 I used to play part 2 and 3 soo much. Wasn’t much of a fan of ”the room” but it had it’s moments. Shit I know Homecoming and Downpour get a lot of hate but let me tell you I enjoyed Homecoming and Downpour very much, bad ass fucking games. I played the room first actually before any other one…. I wasn’t a fan, then when I played other Silent Hill games I realised how amazing it was! I enjoyed them too actually, they weren’t like the old ones I hear people say but I found them enjoyable! Right?? Like they still had the feel and vibe of what Silent Hill is. I don’t know why so many people hate on them. I liked Homecoming a little bit more then Downpour but man I still can’t get over the fact that Silent Hills was shelved. NEW indie horror games 2015. Did Friday the 13th get pushed back? Yes, it’s to be released this October I’m sure! I just made a list on it! 🙂 Spacerium coming in 2016 (the name may change) Spacerium coming in 2016. (the name may change) too much zombie games >.> I know! :O Wish they changed that theme here and there! Great list, I found another list very similar ! 🙂 Anyway, what does everyone think of DOOM and DEAD ISLAND 2 as a horror game? If you want to check it out, it’s here! https://youtu.be/sh85xunw57M. this week in horror. Video Games. Next ‘Friday the 13th: The Game’ Update Makes Jason Scarier & Deadlier. Editorials. Breaking Down All 72 Video Nasties! A24 Haunting Audiences With ‘Hereditary’ This Summer! Video Games. Jason Voorhees Hacks Into ‘Friday the 13th’ Mobile Game! Stephen Lang Reconfirms ‘Don’t Breathe’ Sequel Plans. ‘Damien’ Trailer Gives Visual Reference to ‘The Omen’! Home Video. Sony’s ‘Ratter’ Trailer Stalks New York Student. ‘Pride and Prejudice and Zombies’ TV Spot: Fight Like a Lady. ‘Damien’ Promo Splattered Across the Pavement. The Further. Have You Accepted Our Lord and Savior ‘God-zilla’ Into Your Heart? More in Editorials. [Blu-ray Review] ‘Opera’: A Stylish Later Entry in Argento’s Filmography. Dario Argento, as I’ve said many times before, is a part of my Filmmaker. [Event Report] The Official Las Vegas ‘Saw’ Escape Room. Just when you thought James Wan and Leigh Whannell’s wildly powerful Saw universe couldn’t. Breaking Down All 72 Video Nasties! Video Nasties is a term associated with a period of panic and censorship in. Two Kickass Ways the Devil’s Rejects Could Be Brought Back to Life. As it turns out, Hell really doesn’t want them. We first told you back. 13 Horror Games Not to Turn Your Back on in 2015. Dracula, Pennywise, Cthulhu: all great evils return after periods of protracted slumber. The same goes for this feature. Here are the horror games we're looking forward to in the year ahead. That said, quite a few of the games we highlighted last year still haven't been released – video games, huh. And while we’re still eager to get our hands on the likes of Routine, Asylum, and Fran Bow, we thought it was time to feature some new games. If you want to know more about those and what else you may have missed out on last year, check out that article. There's lots to pick from, of course, but we've narrowed it down to these 13. There's some potential blockbusters and some smaller, more eccentric stuff, too, and we've also tried to limit it to games we think will make 2015. Hidetaka Miyazaki – the malevolent architect behind Demon’s Souls and Dark Souls – returns this year with his latest work, a dark and vicious journey into a diseased land: Bloodborne. As always with From Software games, most of it is veiled from view pre-release, but that which we’ve been able to glean looks incredibly promising. Moving away from fantasy and embracing the gothic, Bloodborne looks like it’ll be much more overtly horror-influenced than any previous entry in the Souls series. Platform : PlayStation 4. Release Date : March 24 (NA, March 27 (UK). The great remake of the original Resi is already out, and once you’ve finished reacquainting yourself with the hallways of Spencer Mansion, it should be time to move onto Revelations 2. It’s being released at weekly intervals, and looks like it’s a more focused, stripped-back Resi experience, building on the previous Revelations game which first appeared on 3DS. Suspense and storytelling are being pushed to the forefront, as is that other mainstay of the series – puzzle solving. Familiar faces Claire and Barry are joined by new characters, who can help them unlock doors and spot hidden objects. In short, what are you selling? A downloadable, episodic Resident Evil experience. We're in. Platform : PlayStation 4, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, Xbox One, PC, PS Vita. Release Date : February 18. Kodoku is very weird game coming to PS4 and PS Vita. Set on a deserted island, players have to use guile and strategy to evade a succession of Lovecraftian monsters tinged by Japanese mythology. Got that? It’s an eclectic game, drawing on many sources of influence, and it’s wrapped up in a distinctive art-style which distinguishes it from pretty much every other game on this list. Platform : PlayStation 4, PS Vita. Release Date : TBA. Frictional Games for my money are one of the great horror studios at work today. Responsible for the Penumbra series and Amnesia, the Swedish developer is this year looking to the stars for its nightmares. SOMA is a high-concept, first-person survival horror game coming to PC and PS4. On the game’s official website, it’s summarised by a single quote from the writer Philip K. Dick: “Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away.” Expect mind-bending horror from SOMA, as it explores some weighty ideas – the mind-body divide, the edge of consciousness – and creates monsters to match its philosophical fears. Eight friends go to an isolated mountain retreat, where they drink, party, and have sex. The problem is they’re not alone. Stop me if you’ve heard this one before. The set-up intentionally draws on every slasher movie made, yet the unique selling point of Until Dawn is how it deals with the idea of consequence. All eight characters can make it through the night or every single one of them can die; it depends on making the right decisions at the right time. Rebuilt for PS4 from a one-time PS3 title, Until Dawn has impressive visuals and uses the DualShock 4 in some really smart and innovative ways. We hope it has enough thrills and surprises to warrant repeat play, as it could make for a brilliantly twisted party game. Platform : PlayStation 4. Release Date : Summer 2015 TBC. It’s been a good long time since we’ve had a Friday the 13th game, the last one on NES back in 1989 featured Jason in a rather fetching purple jumpsuit. This time around it’s an asymmetrical, co-op competitive multiplayer title where you play as Jason Voorhees or band together with friends presumably as a group of sex-obsessed summer-camp-going teens. But there's another game inspired by Friday the 13th which has really caught our imagination. Summer Camp is an asymmetrical slasher which is very much channeling the spirit of Sean Cunningham's seminal '80s horror. You can play as a teen counsellor or as the killer, with the game taking place in a huge environment featuring cabins, a lake, and of course, woods. The key to survival is working together as a team. And to enhance its credentials further, it's being worked on by horror icon Tom Savini and has a score by Harry Manfredini, who scored the original Friday the 13th. © 1996-2018 Ziff Davis, LLC. We have updated our PRIVACY POLICY and encourage you to read it by clicking here. IGN uses cookies and other tracking technologies to customize online advertisements, and for other purposes. IGN supports the Digital Advertising Alliance principles. Learn More. 13 Horror Games Not To Turn Your Back On in 2014. There's something about horror, as a genre, that just won't die. Burn it, stake it, expose it to the light, but it will always return for more. For a while horror has suffered at the hands of mainstream publishers. It's been bastardised by explosions, unnecessary co-op, and protagonists armed-to-the-teeth. Last Halloween, I wrote about the a renaissance that was creeping near, titled Where The Scary Things Are. It was about how horror had begun to thrive elsewhere – on PC, on mobile, on Kickstarter. 2014 is the year when some of these games make the leap to consoles. It's also a year that marks the return of Shinji Mikami to the genre he helped define, and sees mainstream publishers, like SEGA and Bethesda, once again dipping their toes in the genre. The list below isn't an exhaustive survey by any means – it's a snapshot of games I'm really looking forward to. You can read more about them below, or see them in action in the video below, if you dare. Alien: Isolation. PC, PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, Xbox 360, Xbox One. In space no one can hear you scream. So goes the the tag-line. But what about sat in your underwear playing games? The likelihood is Alien: Isolation will elicit a whole manner of yelps and squeals, not to mention palpitations. Taking its cues directly from Ridley Scott’s 1979 masterpiece of sci-fi horror, Isolation casts you as Amanda Ripley. Sound familiar? That’s because she’s the daughter of Ellen Ripley. (She's even mentioned in a deleted scene in Aliens. She died while Ripley was floating through space. It's all very sad.) Isolation has shades of Outlast and Amnesia, but what made it stand out for me was the extraordinary attention to detail; the environments induce strong feelings of deja vu, while the Xenomorph itself is terrifying and almost sentient. Video game gods, I know you’re listening, please don’t let this be rubbish. Please. Dying Light. Techland, Warner Bros. PC, PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, Xbox 360, Xbox One. Zombies. Open world. Apocalypse. As Morrissey so eruditely warbled: stop me if you’ve heard this one before. And it’s true, as you parkour your way around rooftops during the day, gathering items and rigging traps, Dying Light does look a bit Mirror’s Edge meets Dead Island. But what's Alien, if not Jaws in space? (Ignore me, I'm getting sidetracked by reductive elevator pitches.) Things become way more sinister, dangerous, and interesting when the sun goes down. That’s because during the hours of darkness, the zombies become more vicious, and the rooftop you once smugly hung out on is now next to useless. The zombies can now climb. Clever, undead girl. The emphasis is now on surviving to see the sun rise one more time. The Forest. Endnight Games. PC. Bad news : There’s been a terrible plane crash. Good news : You survived a terrible plane crash and your new home is an idyllic island. Bad news : The island is inhabited by a horde of ravenous cannibals. Good news : Oh wait, there is no more good news – except The Forest looks genuinely brilliant. You’re free to explore its dense, er. forest, chop down trees, craft items, build shelter and scavenge food. You can hide behind doors you have made or man up and take the fight to the indigenous threat. It's Minecraft brought to you by Wes Craven and Tobe Hooper. Taking inspiration from the likes of The Descent and Cannibal Holocaust, I expect The Forest to force you into some rather unsavoury situations and then ask you to justify your dubious actions. After all, you are the intruder here. The hills may have eyes, but so does that tree, and maybe that rock. And for the love of god, do I have to go into that cave? Endnight Games. PC. In the 1980s the future looked very much like the abandoned moon base in Routine. The premise is simple: survive long enough to learn what happened to everyone stationed here. Where have they gone? Probably to a wine bar. That’s where everybody went in the 80s. Anyway, what makes Routine even more interesting is that there are no health packs and no second chances – the permadeath system ensures that if you should encounter what actually lurks aboard the Lunar Research Station, you’ll probably have to start right back at the beginning. The Evil Within. Tango Gameworks, Bethesda. PC, PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, Xbox 360, Xbox One. While The Evil Within has a name redolent of a particularly vengeful curry, it actually represents something very special, indeed. It marks the return of Shinji Mikami to a genre he helped to define through his seminal work on the Resident Evil series. We’re talking about the man who directed Resident Evil 4 here. It’s true to say that in recent years he's strayed from the genre, but has continued to produce work that is both memorable and often eccentric (Vanquish, Shadows of the Damned). The release of The Evil Within feels like a homecoming. So far the imagery has been disturbing, grubby, unsettling – as you'd expect – but there also seems to be a generous helping of psychological torment slopping around with the more gruesome stuff. Has the Master still got it? I hope so, and should it prove a success, I expect publishers to start taking the genre a little more seriously. Among The Sleep. Krillbite Studio. PC, MAC, Linux. Among The Sleep is a fascinating independent horror adventure being developed by Norway’s Krillbite Studio. You play as a two-year-old child, exploring their house at night. Hopefully the horror doesn't centre on crawling into your mum and dad's room late at night, after they've been at the wine. From early footage, it seems as if reality begins to falter, lapsing into dream and weird fantasy, the child's diminutive viewpoint warping the world around you in some creatively unsettling ways. Zombie Studios, Atlus. PC, PlayStation 4. Like quite a few games here, Daylight realises that vulnerability is key to stoking fear. You’re equipped with no weapons or items, apart from a mobile phone. It’s your only tool and your only source of light. Just pray to your god that it’s got a better battery life than the iPhone 5. (Or maybe carrying a charger around with you constantly is a secondary mechanic.) Set in that well-worn trope of an abandoned hospital, Daylight has procedurally generated levels ensuring play-throughs are always distinct. Pitched more as a psychological thriller, it sees you wake up in an empty ward without any recollection of who you are or why you’re there (a bit like that time after your work’s Christmas party). You need to find a way out of this unique labyrinth, and I expect that means wading through some of its unpleasant mysteries. Rumours of a private healthcare version with much shorter loading times are, however, unfounded. Pale-faced girls with long black hair. Themes of revenge and rebirth. Sounds like the One Direction Twitter feed, but DreadOut is even scarier than that. A class of high school students get stranded while on a trip. But the town is deserted, and main character, Linda, must embrace this darkness if her and the rest of the class are to make it out alive. DreadOut looks ready to play with a whole range of Asian horror tropes, but it also reminds me of the classic Fatal Frame series but with a more modern approach – the analogue camera ditched in favour of a smartphone. Expect scares but hopefully a good dose of puzzle solving, too. Senscape. PC, MAC, Linux, iOS. Psychological horror set in the Hanwell Mental Institute, a home for the clinically insane. Again, this sounds like familiar territory, but horror has always managed to squeeze new life from well-worn conceits and the Kickstart-funded Asylum looks poised to do the same. It cites dark, baroque prince of horror, H.P. Lovecraft, as one of its main influence, so expect something much more sinister to be slithering away beneath the surface, with the horror stemming more from the cultivation of atmosphere and story-based revelations. PC, MAC, Linux, iOS, Android, Windows Phone. If you’re looking for something that doesn’t involve pointing torches from a first-person perspective, Fran Bow is definitely worth your attention. It’s an offbeat point-and-click adventure, which reached its Kickstarter goal last August. You play as Fran, a young girl struggling with a mental illness and an unfair destiny. After witnessing the horrific loss of her parents, she withdraws into the woods with her only friend – a black cat named Mr. Midnight. Things get worse: Fran winds up in an asylum, and to escape, she must solve puzzles by self-administering various drugs, lapsing in-and-out of psychosis. It’s dark, disturbing stuff, yet it's wrapped up in this weirdly beautiful 2-D art-style. Neverending Nightmares. Retro/Grade. PC, MAC, Linux, Ouya. Neverending Nightmares is a really personal horror game that was inspired by the developer’s own struggles with depression and obsessive-compulsive disorder. Players awake in a darkened mansion, which must be explored to piece together a broken narrative. You have to sift through the darkness, sorting out what is real, and can be trusted, from what is the stuff bad dreams are made of. Again, like Fran Bow, it has a wonderfully-distinct, pen-and-ink style with cross-hatching creating atmospheric shadows. Colour is used sparingly to highlight key objects and, inevitably. blood. The Vanishing of Ethan Carter. The Astronauts. PC. Pioneered by the likes of Lovecraft, Arthur Machen, M.R. James, Weird Fiction is a horror sub-genre that you don’t see explored too frequently outside of the written page. Combining the supernatural, the scientific and mythical in a unique way, it often creates that feeling of existential dread and suffocating awe. Oh yeah, sometimes there are tentacles. The Vanishing of Ethan Carter is directly inspired by those brilliantly macabre tales. But it’s also a police procedural of sorts, casting you in the role of a detective who must solve the eponymous disappearance using a mixture of traditional police methods and his unique supernatural ability to see what happened at crime scenes. (Like that show Millennium, but hopefully better than that show Millennium.) We’ve only glimpsed the world in screenshots and three gifs, but it looks beautiful, ethereal and forbidding. Can you save Ethan Carter before it’s too late? I can’t wait to try. Outlast: The Whistleblower. You may have already played Outlast on PC, or are looking forward to it shortly coming to PlayStation 4. But more is coming, which seeks to fill in some of the narrative gaps in the history of Mount Massive Asylum. You play as the Whistleblower, whose tip brought the original protagonist Miles Upshur to the asylum in the first place. You’ll witness the experiments and abuse that led to the downfall. If you survive the initial outbreak, new areas will open up with terrifying new secrets. Daniel is IGN's UK Games Editor. He quite likes horror, as you can probably tell. You can be part of the world's most embarrassing cult by following him on IGN and Twitter. © 1996-2018 Ziff Davis, LLC. We have updated our PRIVACY POLICY and encourage you to read it by clicking here. IGN uses cookies and other tracking technologies to customize online advertisements, and for other purposes. IGN supports the Digital Advertising Alliance principles. Learn More. 13 Best Free Horror Games. These games will scare the pants off of you. Check out our list of best free horror games for the PC, Xbox One & PS4. Update[10/02/2014]: We’ve updated this list with two titles, both free to play. One is a triple-A title while the other is indie. Read on to find out what they are. The best things in life are free. Or so the saying goes. But so are the worst things in life. Literally. Here you find a list with the best, most horrifying and mind melting horror games you won’t have to pay a dime for. You can find these titles online, most of them playable in your browser. The Unity 3D titles will prompt you to download the Unity Web Installer. Some of these are fun, some of these are just plain terrifying. And some will stay with you even after you’ve stopped playing. Don’t say I didn’t warn you. Midnight Man is a free-to-play horror game that’s inspired by a Creepypasta—kind of like Slender Man. The objective of the game is to avoid the Midnight Man at all costs. You have to move through your house at night while carrying only a candle. If the Midnight Man is near, the candle might go out, you’ll hear a low whisper, and he’ll appear right in front of you. You have to relight the candle in ten seconds or lose the game. Top 5 Survival games on Xbox One. They say that survival of the fittest, whether it be on an island, in an apocalypse, or beneath the sea, is the way humanity survives. Whether this is true or not, I can’t say, but the fifty tons of loot that I’ve gathered from the trail of death behind me is weighing my shoulders down and making it a bit harder to run. I set these guns, clothes and countless piles of ammo down on my side table and wonder about what the best survival games are for my trusty Xbox One. I whittle away at this thought as I run from the zombies and swarms of humans, realising that as the light dies out I have the answer in front of me: a top five list! I could write all of the games down, but a top five list gives the best games a spotlight under my fluorescent light, and helps me narrow this down tremendously. Anyhow, here are the top five Survival Games on Xbox One, with bonus mentions! Honorable Mentions. Minecraft: Xbox One Edition. We all know about Minecraft, and if you don’t you’ve been away for a long time! The game is all about, well, mining and crafting, whether it be mining out the new Moria or crafting a 3:1 scale of the Sydney Opera House, you can do it all in this Voxel based game of survival. With Multiplayer support and a plethora of textures and items, Minecraft can be filled with an infinity of outcomes for you to survive. With the added bonus of Survival, it is really quite good. Just remember…we built this city on Block and Bowl! Elite: Dangerous. Whether it be smuggling, combat or simple trading that you enjoy, Elite: Dangerous has you covered. This game isn’t about survival in the means of water and food, but you’ll need precious fuel and make sure you don’t warp drive straight into a sun! Elite: Dangerous is fantastic for putting a podcast on and listening to harrowing tales as you pirate the massive galaxy that makes up the game. Just remember to invest in fuel, or you may end up stranded in space. You definitely don’t want that. GTA: Online. It may not be a survival game in the traditional sense, but when it comes to public lobbies, survival is the name of the game. Whether you like to fly, race, shoot up stores, or help people shoot up their veins, GTA has you covered with its multiplayer system. Run missions and flee in terror as the highest levelled member in the lobby nears your location, circling overhead with a VTOL armed with homing missiles. Just close your eyes and hope he crashes into the beautiful skyline of Los An- er – Santos. 5. Subnautica. It all began with some flashy lights and a big ker-splash! Get ready to go off the deep end! In Subnautica you find yourself crash landing into the ocean of an alien planet, before deciding it would be a good idea to document everything whilst trying to survive. Face monstrous fish that dwarf you and lead you to believe that you may very well be the lowest on the food chain. Build bases and answer the age long question of whether you shall sink or swim! With lovely graphics and an atmosphere out of this world, Subnautica wraps its tendrils around you and won’t let go until you can rip yourself free. But who would ever want that? 4. Dying Light. Whether you like zombies or not, you must admit they can be pretty terrifying. In the latest Techland game you play as Kyle Crane, a man sent into a quarantine zone for story reasons, but quickly find out that survival is where it is at! Race through the slums or the city, using parkour as your main form of transport. Gather weapons and care packages and even some pieces of paper, presumably written by MacGyver, that tell you how to make weapons of mass decapitation! The scariest part of this game isn’t dealing with the zombies during the day, but trying to avoid the creatures during the night – ones whom are more vicious and have special abilities that make for one hellish night on the town. Dying Light may not feature a food or water meter, but the sheer number of zombies roaming around makes it difficult to survive without exhausting all of your options. With a mode that allows people to invade your game as the night creatures, a setting which can be toggled, makes for the ultimate game of cat and mouse. Unfortunately, it looks like you’re the mouse. Grab your night lights and glow sticks ’cause it’s zombie time! 3. ARK: Survival Evolved. With the title containing the word ‘survival’, I would hope this game is a survival game. After a flip through the community and a quick romp through the forest with which I ended up eaten by a dinosaur, I realized I hadn’t given this game much credit. You start the game looking for stone and plant fibers, slowly progressing to the point of taming and domesticating dinosaurs, all while dealing with food and water shortages, heat issues and limbs breaking. ARK: Survival Evolved has all the staples of a survival game, but they seem a little strange; the rate food goes down is exponentially faster than it really should be, and what you do eat seems really weak. I ate a whole bush worth of berries and got a few percentage points for my troubles, and a dodo steak didn’t hit the spot either. I didn’t worry about water, but I couldn’t stand more than ten feet away from my fire pit before my clothe-less person complained about burning up. That being said, it is still a fantastic survival game, if a bit illogical. Now saddle up and ride ’em, velociboy! 2. Dead Island Riptide. Some may argue that Dead Island isn’t a survival game, but I have to disagree. You have to worry about health and your weapon durability, and there are hordes of relentless zombies that want to tear you apart. There are also annoying glitches that you have to survive, but they can be used against the zombies in a Dark Souls-ian twist. You have to help survivors escape the zombie infested island after your boat shores up, but you are equipped with only a paddle, something you must then thwart the infesting hordes with. You can swap the paddle out for a plethora of different weapons, ranging anywhere from a stick to a rocket launcher. That being said, it has a survival feel to it as you try to upset the least amount of zombies for fear of being overrun, whilst having to scour and scavenge every piece of loot to make better weapons graced by MacGyver Magic. It is a must play, and the Definitive Edition is just a measly twenty bucks on the Xbox Games Store. 1. Fallout 4. War has changed in the latest Fallout instalment, showing us the social experiment side of Vault-Tec – you’re made into a man-sicle within the first five minutes, depending solely on how much you play with the new face maker. When you awaken, you find the world has jumped into the handbasket and is on its merry way to hell. But all is not lost. Your old home is still around and you seem to be able to build anything with just enough reagents from junk that litters every shelf and floor of the wasteland. Before you exit the elevator, a pop-up shows, asking if you would like to enable survival mode. You quickly accept it, hoping that this is the thing you’ve been waiting for, when out of nowhere, your character is starving and dehydrated and tired. You rush to eat something and drink some water, lying down in your old bed to finally take care of yourself. You awake to find you have a plethora of diseases! Sleep has become a gateway to death, but it is the only way to save! You slowly get better as you collect scrap, killing everything that stands in the way of you. Your mission: get vaccinated. Now just remember, fumigate every other week, and if you can’t taste the delicious mutfruit, stop fumigating. So there we have it, these are clearly the best survival games the Xbox One has to offer us right now. If you’re a springy survivalist, or a pale masochist, you should play all of these games until you can finally say you have survived…the summer drought of games that is! Do you agree with the choices? Let me know in the comments below or on our social channels. RELATED ARTICLESMORE FROM AUTHOR. Team17 and MakinGames join forces to bring Raging Justice to Xbox One, PS4, Switch and PC in 2018. Put your ninja skills to the test as Claws of Furry prepares to punch its way to Xbox One, Switch and PC. Asemblance Review. Not even a mention for the most awesome State of Decay? Find us on Metacritic. Featured on NewsNow. Proud to be an Opencritic contributor. 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Horror Games. 2DARK Agony Amnesia: Collection Assemblance The Bunker Darkest Dungeon Claire: Extended Cut Crawl Blues and Bullets Days Gone Deadlight: Director's Cut Detention Outlast DayZ Dying Light The Evil Within The Evil Within DLC The Evil Within 2 H1Z1 Outlast Whistleblower DLC Among the Sleep SOMA Resident Evil HD: Remaster Home: A Unique Horror Adventure Silent Hills Alien Isolation Call of Cthulhu Danganronpa 1+2 Reload Danganronpa Another Episode: Ultra Despair Girls Dark Arcana: The Carnival Dead by Daylight Dead Island 2 Doom ECHO Forgotten Memories Human Element Daylight Hellblade: Senua's Sacrifice HeroCade HUNT: Horrors of the Gilded Age Kona Kodoku Until Dawn Grave Draugen Bloodborne Killing Floor 2 Let It Die Little Nightmares Lone Survivor: Director's Cut Neverending Nightmares Night Trap: 25th Anniversary Edition Observer Paranormal Activity: The Lost Soul Resident Evil Revelations 2 Outlast 2 Perception The Forest The Order: 1886 Resident Evil Revelations Slender: The Arrival How to Survive: Storm Warning Edition Sylvio The Binding of Isaac: Rebirth The Persistence Resident Evil VII We Happy Few The Walking Dead Season 3 Resident Evil Zero HD Remaster Class 4 Last Year Last Stitch Goodnight Pamela Routine The Brookhaven Experiment The Walking Dead (Overkill Games) The Walking Dead: Michonne Ghost Theory The Book of Regrets Through the Woods The Inpatient Layers of Fear What Remains of Edith Finch The Hum: Abductions Dollhouse Dying Light: The Following Emily Wants To Play The Final Station Here They Lie Kholat Moons of Madness Friday the 13th: The Game Slayaway Camp: Butcher's Cut Sundered The Sexy Brutale The Coma: Recut The Rabbit Hole Uncanny Valley Until Dawn: Rush of Blood Victor Vran: Overkill Edition Visage Weeping Doll White Night White Noise 2 White Day: A Labyrinth Named School Yomawari: Midnight Shadows Zombi. Popular Horror Games. Paranormal Activity: The Lost Soul Observer Slayaway Camp: Butcher's Cut Sundered Outlast 2 Resident Evil VII Little Nightmares. New Horror Games. Yomawari: Midnight Shadows Slayaway Camp: Butcher's Cut White Noise 2 Night Trap: 25th Anniversary Edition The Book of Regrets Paranormal Activity: The Lost Soul Observer Hellblade: Senua's Sacrifice Perception HeroCade Crawl Danganronpa 1+2 Reload Uncanny Valley The Amnesia Collection Until Dawn: Rush of Blood (VR) The Brookhaven Experiment (VR) Here They Lie (VR) Claire: Extended Cut The Final Station Emily Wants To Play The Bunker The Park The Walking Dead: Michonne Layers of Fear. Upcoming Horror Games. The Evil Within 2 (October 13th, 2017) Agony (2017) Call of Cthulhu (2017) Days Gone (TBA) Detention (2017) Ghost Theory (2017) The Inpatient (VR) (November 21, 2017) Pathologic 2 (2017) Moons of Madness (2018) System Shock Visage We Happy Few The Hum: Abductions (TBA) You haven’t experienced true horror until you’ve played these PS4 horror games. That being said, you’re busy, and maybe you want this massive list narrowed down. For that, take a look at our Top 10 horror games for the ps4. Still not satisfied? Let’s take a look at those ten terrifying titles and see why they’re worth your time. The Top 10 Horror Games on PS4. 10. The Evil Within. From Shinji Mikami, the creator of Resident Evil, comes his next series (hopefully). This horror game takes classic cues while blazing its own trails. You play as detective Sebastian Castellanos who begins the game investigating a grisly murder at the local mental institution. That’s how it starts, but things quickly spiral out of control. Terrifying enemies and insane bosses make this a horror title worth your time. If you like classic style graphics, great art, atmospheric music, and plenty of jump scares, you need to check this one out. 9. Paranormal Activity: The Lost Soul. While this is a VR-only title, this was a game that really impressed me. It starts out pretty simple as you explore a house in VR, but things soon start to go awry. With a randomized scare system, you'll never know what is going to happen next outside of story moments. Fans of the film will see plenty of nods to the lore, and horror game fans will find that VR horror is ten times worse than seeing it on a screen. The only reason this one doesn't rank higher is because of the odd control scheme and wonky tracking that can happen in the early parts of the game as you get everything figured out. Once I was set up and familiar with the controls, Paranormal Activity: The Lost Soul seriously terrified me in a way that only VR can. 8. Amnesia: Collection. Amnesia was the game that put indie horror on the map back in the day. This collection for the PS4 includes the excellent Amnesia: Dark Descent, and the decent sequel, a Machine for Pigs. Both games are hallmarks of terror. The first game especially still gives me nightmares. They use a lovecraftian style of horror that relies more on what you can't see than what you can. Fear of the unknown, after all, is the strongest of all. The latest DOOM reboot was the action-packed gorefest the series needed. While it's not too scary when you're mowing down demons with a chainsaw, it's all delightfully horrific. There are plenty of moments when the intensity gets cranked up as well for incredibly frantic encounters and massive boss fights. It absolutely nailed the fast-paced feel of the original, while employing modern conventions and a super-fluid frame rate. Even the story had some great moments, with a fully realized in-game encyclopedia that goes into excellent detail on the lore behind the game's world. 6. Until Dawn. Until Dawn is a love letter to horror fans. It combines everything you would want from a horror game. Jump scares, supernatural elements, a slasher style story, a classic cast, it's all here. The graphics are nothing short of incredible and the way you can pick and choose how the story plays out, and who survives, makes this one of the best horror experiences on PS4. If you've played this one, be sure to give the VR spin-off a try. It's a lot different, but as a rail shooter, it can be a great way to experience horror on VR for the first time. 5. Observer. Observer is a cyberpunk horror game from the developers who did Layers of Fear. This one is something special. While it has some technical issues on PS4 and PS4 Pro, those go to the wayside during the moments that truly count. You play as a detective who can jack into the minds of suspects and interrogate them using their worst fears. Once you jack into the first mind and you experience the visual and audio assault that Observer has to offer, you'll forget all about those pesky technical issues and frame rate drops. This game is unrelenting, visceral, and visually stunning. It gets your heart racing and its not afraid to really push the boundaries of what you expect from a horror game. Be ready for this one, because it's going to take you on one hell of a trip. 4. Hellblade: Senua's Sacrifice. Hellblade: Senua's Sacrifice is psychological horror at its finest. This cinematic experience from Ninja Theory places you in the shoes of Senua who seeks to enter the Norse underworld in the hopes of saving the soul of her love. Senua herself suffers from psychosis as a result of a trauma in her past. She hears voices, experiences hallucinations, and alll manner of other terrifying experiences. This game is intense, emotional, and downright horrifying at times. Some of the imagery here is not for the faint of heart, and the depths of the underworld hold their own horrors as well. Combine that with the very real terror she feels as her mind attacks itself, and you have one of the scariest psychological horror games I can remember. ' Knowing that people in the real world suffer from these kinds of symptoms makes it all the more horrific. It's an excellent portrayal of such issues, and a creative masterpiece in its own right. 3. The Outlast Series. In Outlast, you play as a reporter following a tip from someone as he investigates a mental asylum. In Outlast 2, you're the survivor of a helicopter crash in the mountains, and your wife has been kidnapped by one of the cults that calls the vast stretch of forest home. What follows is incredibly intense, horrific, gory, and pulse-pounding. You're never safe, and you're always on the run or hiding. I can seriously only handle this one in bursts. Then you tack on the Whistleblower DLC for the first game, and you have the perfect horror package. This extra story takes place before the first game and adds even more unspeakable horror to the package. You can also check out Outlast 2. While they're not related, the general feel and focus is the same, which is why they're grouped together here. You can buy all of them in a physical disc package called Outlast Trinity. These games are not only incredibly violent, utterly horrifying, and really screwed up, but they will touch upon subjects and themes that many may find offensive. Go into this one with caution, and know that nothing is sacred in these games. If you can look past some of the incredibly intense subject matter, the gameplay, scares, and the atmosphere is second-to-none. 2. Alien Isolation. This one is special for a number of reasons. For starters, it's one of the best games based on the Alien franchise (which isn't hard to do, given the alternatives, but admirable nonetheless). On top of that, it's also one of the most terrifying "play as the prey" type of horror games I've ever encountered. In this game, a series icon, known as a Xenomorph, stalks you on a derelict space station. Did I say stalk? I meant that it hunts you. This thing can hear you and it can come from any direction. On higher difficulties, it can even smell you! If you can see it, it's probably too late for you. This game literally had me on the edge of my seat, and I had to play in bursts. 1. Resident Evil VII. Resident Evil VII is exactly what the series needed to become relevant again. With a fresh new first-person perspective, a more personal storyline, and exquisite graphics, this is the definitive horror experience on PS4. The Baker family makes for some truly terrifying villains, and the swamp setting offers some gritty and gruesome set pieces for you to enjoy. The storyline was tight and had some great pacing. It loses a little bit of its shimmer in the second half when it leans on the action, but the first chunk of the game is pure and concentrated terror. The DLC options provide some great new scenarios as well. The main game, along with most of the DLC, is playable in VR as well! This is the best horror Capcom has done in years, and represents a culmination of all the best horror practices that games have developed over the years. With new and exciting horror experiences coming down the pipeline, only time will tell where we go from here. One thing is certain: horror is alive and well on the PS4! Which horror games terrify you the most? Let us know in the comments! Additional PS4 Game Categories. beyond: two souls? Submitted by fuyu on Sun, 07/19/2015 - 05:12. Beyond Two Souls, a horror. Submitted by Derrick on Wed, 11/04/2015 - 11:10. Lone Survivor (Director's Cut) Submitted by Derrick on Wed, 11/04/2015 - 11:04. Submitted by l8p on Thu, 02/16/2017 - 14:30. What about allison road ? Is. Submitted by Leah on Sun, 10/01/2017 - 17:11. Add new comment. Your Comments. Vr gloves 4 days 4 hours ago Remote play 1 week 5 days ago Ps4 problem 1 week 6 days ago No. It all depends on what 3 weeks 4 days ago Hacked 4 weeks 16 hours ago From the future 1 month 8 hours ago No mans sky? 1 month 2 weeks ago. PS4 Social. Cast Your Vote! PS4 Experts - Dedicated to all the hardcore fans out there. © PS4PlayStation4.com - All graphics of The Sony Playstation are copyright of Sony. We as a PS4 fan site are NOT affiliated with SCEI (Sony Computer Entertainment Inc.) nor endorsed by SCEI. We love Sony and their products! We will work day and night to bring you the very latest news and updates! View our Privacy Policy & Disclaimer. Long live the PS4, it is an epic gaming console. Our 10 Most Anticipated Horror Games of 2016. The year’s almost over. It’s been good to us, but it’s time to leave it in the past where it can sit poolside with the other years we’re slowly forgetting, drowning its sorrows in Moscow mules until it forgets the fact that it was one Konami short of greatness. A handful of games is what kept the last twelve months from feeling like the teaser trailer that arrives a few days before the actual trailer. We’re going to forget about it completely the moment we’re given the real thing, but there was some excitement to be had. This was the year that gave gamers the opportunity to step into the shoes of a needy Pamela Voorhees, as we pooled our resources in order to buy our son a first-class ticket so he would finally come home to us. It also let us know about the remakes we’ll be getting sometime around 2017 of Resident Evil 2 and System Shock , because miracles exist, apparently. Oh, and System Shock 3 . You know what? Let’s talk about how great 2017 is going to be. I can’t see Resident Evil 7 until then, and if 2016 is going to kick off the virtual reality revolution, then 2017 is about when they’ll start being worth their price tag. I’m so over 2016, you guys. I’ll still do this — I just want you to know that my heart’s not going to be in it. It’ll be far too busy wondering if 2017 will also be the year that gifts us with a third Condemned game. Allison Road is a spiritual successor, of sorts, to the game you’ve forbidden me from whining over. Or, at least that’s how it began. Now, it’s its own entity, separate from the material that inspired it. This near-photorealistic scarefest looks absolutely terrifying. I don’t need to sell you on this. Outlast 2 is going to be like Outlast , only better (we hope). Red Barrels has proven adept at building a stunning world with a very specific goal in mind: to test our capacity for visceral terror. All I ask is for them to drop the tired asylum setting and populate this sequel with more villains that are as memorably traumatic as The Groom. Release Date: Fall 2016 (PC, PS4, XBO) Lunar Software was as surprised as we were when they realized their promising roguelike-ish sci-fi horror game Routine would take significantly longer to finish than originally expected. Everything we’ve seen of the game up to this point has pointed to its being well worth the wait. Hopefully, we won’t have to wait too much longer. Big guns. Bigger demons. The Doom franchise has always been about what happens when the two are combined, and its latest incarnation isn’t likely to stray from that core concept. This is exactly the sort of bombastic horror game that id Software is brilliant at. The new SnapMap modding toolset that’s coming with it should go a long way in keeping players engaged, but the real question is whether or not the same can be said about its multiplayer offering. The landscape of multiplayer gaming is as complex as it is competitive, ruled by a handful of renowned franchises like Call of Duty and Halo that have had time to perfect their craft. Doom will need to deliver something special if it’s going to compete with that. Release Date: Spring 2016 (PC, PS4, XBO) Technically, this spot is reserved for Telltale’s episodic series based on The Walking Dead , which is expected to grow considerably in 2016 with the arrival of two games. The first is a three episode-long spin-off titled The Walking Dead: Michonne that’s coming in the spring, and the second is the third season in the main series that’s expected to release in the fall. And since we’re talking about it, there are two other games based on the wildly popular comic-turned-hit television series in the works, I’m just not convinced they’ll arrive before 2017. You might remember that memorably grim trailer for Overkill’s The Walking Dead that series creator Robert Kirkman seemed excited about. Then there’s Overkill’s The Walking Dead – The VR Experience , which is something different, apparently. Neither game has been given a release date, so consider them honorable mentions for now. Release Date: TBA 2016 (PC, PS3, PS4, 360, XBO) As much as I enjoy playing games about the walking de-err, those shambling ghouls, their proven marketability among gamers may be why so many developers have chosen to make more games that star them, rather than give us something about dinosaurs, vampires, or aliens. The Hum: Abductions aims to tackle that last subject and from what we’ve seen, it appears to be shaping up nicely. Set in a city that’s been invaded by aliens and the head-shaped vehicles they often favor, Abductions follows a lone mother who’s determined to save her infant son from the scrawny grey bastards that probably stole her husband. Release Date: Spring 2016 (PC, PS4) Until Dawn: Rush of Blood is an expansion to one of the best games of 2015 that’s basically doing its own thing. It’s coming from the same team that brought us Until Dawn , only it’ll be less of a cinematic, story-driven tale inspired by the slasher film genre and more of an on-rails shooter built for virtual reality — specifically PlayStation VR. This is the year that Resident Evil got back on track. The Resident Evil remaster and Revelations 2 showed a side of Capcom we hadn’t seen since their passion for the horror genre became all about getting a slice of that Call of Duty money pie. 2016 can keep that momentum going, or it can bring it to a grinding halt. The former is looking more likely thanks to Resident Evil 0 HD and the far-off Resident Evil 2 remake, but those are examples of Capcom sticking to what worked in the past. I’m more worried about any original ideas they have from now on, since that’s what got us Resident Evil 6 and the half-assed Operation Raccoon City . Unfortunately, Umbrella Corps is the only new-ish thing we know about right now. Who knows? It could be fun. Release Date: January 19 (PC, PS3, PS4, 360, XBO) Dying Light: The Following is another expansion that’s earned a spot on this list out of sheer ambition. Techland has done everything right with their latest open-world game about maiming the undead with the shit you built out of spare parts and a total disregard for how science works. It started with the smart decision to make Dead Island again, this time with parkour mechanics, and it continued with a year’s worth of support — much of it in the form of free content — that’s built the foundation for the game’s biggest evolution yet. Techland is skilled at the art of making what worked well enough and making it work so much better. The Following and the ginormous patch thats coming with it are doing exactly what Dying Light did to Dead Island , only it’s not charging us $60 for the effort. Release Date: Spring 2016 (PC, PS4, XBO) It took a long damn time for System Shock to creep back into our lives like a malicious virus hidden inside a spam email, if that virus left you feeling woozy with anticipation. That’s a weird analogy. I’m going to try that again. After a lengthy hiatus, SHODAN is about to burst into our lives like the Kool-Aid Man, if the Kool-Aid Man was breaking into homes so he could easily drag all those helpless children kicking and screaming into his torture room to waterboard them with tasty flavored beverages. That’s still weird, but I’ll stick with it because I like what it implies about the red liquid he’s made of. Night Dive Studios, the new home of System Shock , did a fine job in remastering the original game. I’m sure they’ll be just as respectful with the remake they’re working on now. This series faded into obscurity long enough ago that an entire generation of gamers wouldn’t know what it is. Night Dive has been patient in their efforts to bring it back with a remaster that doubled as a reminder of what made this series so special in the late 90’s. Oh, and we’re also getting System Shock 3 , just not in 2016. Release Date: TBA 2016 (PC, PS4, XBO) Which upcoming horror game are you most looking forward to in 2016? And before you lambaste me for not mentioning a stab ’em up like Friday the 13th: The Game or Last Year , they didn’t make this list because that would be redundant. AROUND THE WEB. I can’t believe how fast it took for this new genre to start blowing up, but I can’t get enough of my nerves crawling simultaneously from these games I’ve never been more sucked to a universe like these games with anything else. So ready for outlast 2! I thought I was the only one looking forward to Rush of Blood. I just see people complaining because it’s different from the main game. I’ve always loved on-rail shooters, so I’m excited for it. Outlast 2, yes! I hope it takes place in a cool location. And of course I’m excited Resident Evil 0. Gonna pick up the physical copy with the REmake included. Not much to be anticipated, must say. I love DOOM, but i didn’t found anything exciting or competitive in Quake-esqe fragga-boom jumping around MP. Campaign will tell… I hope that Outlast 2 will bring something new, “hide and run” mechanism was ok two times. It is time to change these rules… System Shock 3, this is it. And Routine, if released in this century of course 🙂 doom multiplayer was garbage . its like a generic tiny space halo not doom. I disagree. Care to elaborate on how it should be made? yes…. like i dont know , like DOOM. . Horror and gore and demons not halo ! Oh dude… it’s just MP. Wait for the SP experience. Doom was never really know for its Multiplayer. I am really hoping its good . I want to buy just for that and i heard you can customize maps too ! I love DOOM I just want it to live up to the name I remember. I’ve been a Wolfenstein fan and Doom fan since the beginning. DOOM LOOKS GREAT. I think Bethesda has done them both justice. Doom should be even more nuts than wolfenstein. So we should be safe. As far as the MP though. It’s nice to have a fast paced MP like that again. It felt Quake arena like. Which is welcomed in a sea of COD. It was much faster than Halo too. shit list honestly… we need more silent hill type, resident evil 1 type, siren type games as new ips … i am sick of first person to death! What about the Friday The 13th game. Read that last paragraph. I wanted desperately a PS4 or XboxOne logo at the bottom of “Allison Road” or ” Routine” !! I guess I’ll have to keep my fingers crossed. Redundant,yes. But friday the 13th game i imagine is going to blow last year out of the water. Its just pure fact. I honestly have been waiting forever for routine to release and im sure many others have but cant say i care for many of the other games on this list. “Layers of Fear” would be my most anticipated with “Allison Road” a close second. Great list! I just found another list that included similar games to this ! 🙂 Although there are some games different there ! Anyway, what does everyone think of DOOM and DEAD ISLAND 2 as a horror game? If you want to check it out, it’s here! https://youtu.be/sh85xunw57M. If you like PT, Allison Road, and Layers of Fear, look up Visage. You won’t be disappointed. It was recently funded on KickStarter and coming Jan 2017 (tentative) to PC, PS4, XB1. this week in horror. Video Games. Next ‘Friday the 13th: The Game’ Update Makes Jason Scarier & Deadlier. Editorials. Breaking Down All 72 Video Nasties! A24 Haunting Audiences With ‘Hereditary’ This Summer! Video Games. Jason Voorhees Hacks Into ‘Friday the 13th’ Mobile Game! 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