Tag: Psychological Horror
Heart of the Forest Review
A slow-burning psychological horror that roots its terror in trauma and fractured trust, Heart of the Forest delivers an emotionally gripping survival story where the true enemy isn’t just in the woods—it’s within.
Greyhill Incident Re-probed Edition Review
A quiet, paranoid survival horror that finds its power in limitation, implication, and the creeping fear that the truth—no matter how real—may never be believed.
True Fear: Forsaken Souls – Part 3 Review
A haunting, heartfelt finale that proves slow-burn horror and classic adventure design can still thrive—imperfect in craft, powerful in soul.
Run from Duck Review
Water rises, walls close in, and somewhere in the shadows, the Duck hunts. Every heartbeat counts, every turn could be your last. In Run from Duck, survival isn’t about fighting—it’s about running, listening, and never looking back.
Exorcist: Horror Simulator Review
Exorcist: Horror Simulator proves that the scariest weapon isn’t a gun but uncertainty. By turning exorcism into a tense ritual of observation and faith, Burlea Games Studio crafts a haunted experience where panic is the real enemy — and knowledge is the only way out.
The Wellmonts Case Review
A restrained and chilling detective horror, The Wellmonts Case uses careful investigation and masterful sound design to unravel a family tragedy that feels uncomfortably real—proof that the scariest stories are often the quietest.
Jimmy and the Pulsating Mass Review
A charming yet unsettling RPG set inside a child’s dream, Jimmy and the Pulsating Mass blends inventive combat with a surprisingly mature story, creating a nostalgic adventure that’s equal parts heartfelt and haunting.
I’m not a Human: Horror Review
A claustrophobic basement nightmare driven by sound and suspense, I’m Not a Human: Horror uses a simple premise and an unpredictable stalker to create genuine tension—rough around the edges, but chilling where it counts.
HELLMART Review
HELLMART turns the humble convenience store shift into a seven-day nightmare, mixing meticulous supermarket simulation with slow-burn horror. Between scanning groceries and barricading doors, you’ll decide who deserves shelter—and who should be left to the dark—making every night a nerve-racking moral gamble.
The 9th Charnel Review
A deeply atmospheric survival horror that thrives on tension, silence, and psychological unease. The 9th Charnel is unsettling in all the right ways, even if its slow pace won’t appeal to everyone.













