Watch horror Movies for free with Amazon Prime

The Best Horror Game Ever - Outlast

The Best Horror Game Ever - Outlast
2013
5

From beginning to end, Outlast’s graphics and audio are one of the best in a horror game. From the intensified lighting to terrifying audio, they both work together to keep the player on the edge throughout the gameplay experience.

The lighting in Outlast is very dark to give the player a terrifying vibe. When traveling around, all the player has is a camera with night vision to see because the majority of the asylum is bathed in darkness. The player will be looking through the bright green lens while navigating the asylum, which adds to the tension of the game.

Outlast’s horrific survival game keeps players on their toes as they make their way through an insane asylum with deranged mental patients lurking around every corner. Red Barrel Studios were the developers for Outlast and their first game they ever developed. It’s considered to be one of the best horror games out there

Outlast’s horrific survival game keeps players on their toes as they make their way through an insane asylum with deranged mental patients lurking around every corner.”

The audio in Outlast makes it hard to navigate through the asylum. While opening doors to explore the asylum, it can be difficult at times open these doors because the doors make a creaking sound and might cause a mental patient to come after the player.

Other details like hearing footsteps or mental patients talking to themselves also add to the tension because the player knows that the patients are near them, but don’t know where the enemy is at due to the light being so dark.

Character models in Outlast are not bad, but it’s definitely not good. When going through rooms in Outlast, most of the insane patients look creepy from a distance. When the player looks at the patients up close, the patients don’t really look that creepy.

For the most part, the gameplay keeps players on the edge of their sets. The player will be playing as an investigative journalist, Miles Upshur. Miles goes through an insane asylum to do a report on the psychiatric institution. Outlast forces players to play strategically by sneaking around enemies, using the camera’s battery life wisely, and knowing their surroundings.

Throughout the journey, Miles Upshur is completely defenseless. So players cannot attack any enemies, but players can only run and hide. Since players are defenseless, this makes the gameplay more terrifying and difficult, but this also makes the gameplay repetitive after awhile.

The gameplay only gets repetitive when players constantly have to run and hide or die. Some of the areas of the insane asylum will take some patience because players will die a decent amount. After dying several times, players will be able to memorize the areas in the asylum and the routes the enemies will walk, which is sad because of how enormous the asylum is and the number of deranged patients there is.

Overall, Outlast character models are not that good and the gameplay might get repetitive, but Outlast is still one of the best horror games on the market right now. This game is recommended if you’re looking for a game that builds tension and jumpscares.

 
 

OTHER GAMES REVIEWS

Zombie Army Trilogy

Zombie Army Trilogy

Zombies have been the perpetual whipping young men of the shooter sort for some time now, and it was certain that sooner or later they’d get squashed up with Nazis – second in the gun feed class table – to make a definitive blame free focuses to impact away at.  While Zombie Army Trilogy on the PC is a long way from the first to wheel out these undead fascists, it does endeavor to convey a novel twist to the fights against its undead army, by utilizing a significant number of the mechanics from the Sniper Elite recreations – including its scandalous murder cam. This discharge is really a re-mastering of two bits of PC selective substance, with the expansion of a just took the ribbon off new third battle section to round... Read More

Alien: Isolation

Alien: Isolation

In addition, of every last one of games I’ve played in the not so distant past, Alien: Isolation is most worth appreciating. The last item has ended up being just as fulfilling as the different demos I’ve played over the recent months; the diversion succeeds on various levels.  It’s a grand bit of fan administration, the most perfectly and splendidly acknowledged virtual adjustment of a motion picture universe ever dedicated to polygons, yet its dedication to the source material doesn’t take on at the cost of playability. It couldn’t have happened to a superior film. Outsider wasn’t just an original bit of sci-fi film, yet a point of interest work of frightfulness too. Inventive Assembly has drawn most intensely on that... Read More

The Evil Within 2

The Evil Within 2 may be more of a mixed bag than its predecessor. While it takes certain strong praises of the original and improves on them tenfold, such as the aforementioned art direction, Tango Gameworks’ return to the series sees not only a drastic change in pacing and narrative, but a complete shift in structure as well – something which is much to the detriment of this experience. While The Evil Within was a pretty mixed bag overall, it was a welcome return back to the time of second-era Resident Evil games. It may have been a shoddy revitalization of a genre that had been phased out in place of a plethora of even shoddier third-person action games, but its strong art direction and visual trickery showed true promise which ... Read More

Resident Evil 7

The end result is a bit more like old Resident Evil than people may have imagined, and in the best way possible. One could find a lot of cause to compare this sequel to the reboot of Doom. It captures the spirit of old Resident Evil games and brings it forward in a modern, fresh direction. For those who may have felt betrayed by Resident Evil 6’s heavy action leanings, Resident Evil 7 is for you. You star as Ethan, a man on the hunt for his wife Mia. Thought to be dead, he receives an email from her three years later telling him to find her at Baker Plantation in Louisiana. Nothing strange about that, of course. Ethan heads off in order to find Mia. One has to wonder what first goes through Ethan’s head when he arrives, as he’s greeted... Read More

Outlast 2

  Outlast set a new bar for indie and mainstream horror when it came out in 2013. It made waves among the horror themed Let’s Players of the world, but was also critically acclaimed for its design and characters. It was so popular that a sequel was only sensible, and now we have Outlast 2. Instead of traveling back to Mount Massive Asylum, players are dropped in the middle of a deranged cult village and must traverse churches, mountains, forests, swamps, and mines to find their wife and escape. All the while, you record the horrors you witness and uncover the secrets of the cult, as well as face memories of your past. In story, Outlast 2 has no relation to its predecessor, but fans of the original will find that... Read More

FRIDAY THE 13TH

Well, the franchise has grown up after the movie released after following the Kickstarter campaign and watching this game grow, I could not have been more excited when I found out I was going to be reviewing Friday the 13th: The Game. I’m a huge fan of the movies and longed for a game worthy of being associated with these cult classics. The second I turned it on I was greeted with some nostalgic 80’s TV style publisher and developer logos, which were accompanied by tinny sound and the bad quality you would find on an old home video. The scene was set and I was ready for things to get real scary, real fast. Sadly, this excitement never came to fruition. The premise of the game is nice and simple; just like the movies’ you are... Read More