Three horror games for Halloween
By Gieson Cacho // The Mercury News (TNS)
Instead of designing a soothing and comfortable experience, horror-game developers aim to elicit unease and anxiety. For players, that adrenaline-soaked fear pays off when it’s combined with compelling gameplay and produces indelible moments.
The memories of horror games are often more vivid than for an action-driven shooter. That emotional rush stays with players. This Halloween season, three titles are trying to produce the same feelings. Each one has a different way of doing it, but all of them rely on a strong atmosphere to stir dread into players.
The first on the list is The Dark Pictures Anthology: Man of Medan. Produced by Supermassive Games, Man of Medan is essentially a video game version of a slasher flick except it gives players the agency to control the characters. Ever watch a movie and yell at the main character to stay away from the closet? In Man of Medan, players can make it happen.
Players will control five characters who have been kidnapped by fishermen in the Pacific Ocean. That’s when the group runs into a ghost ship and board it looking for shelter and treasure. The only problem is that horrors lie within, and players have to navigate the scenario.
Success depends on minigames that emerge as players explore the ship. Sometimes they’ll have quicktime events as they’re chased by maniacs. Other times they’ll have to control their heart beat via a rhythm-based minigame. The one flaw is that the secret behind the Ourang Medan ghost ship is fairly predictable, and once they figure it out, players can keep the cast alive as they endure the frightening adventure.
Erica from Flavourworks, offers players a way to control the outcome of a story, but the developer takes away the granular control. Instead of moving characters around and exploring a beautifully crafted vessel, this interactive thriller acts more like a Choose Your Own Adventure novel that features full-motion video.
Players follow Erica Mason, a woman with a tragic past. Her mother died when she was young and her father was murdered. One day, she receives a package with severed hand and that causes her to take shelter at the Delphi House, a mental institution that her father helped establish.
The game is best experienced with an iOS or Android device. Erica uses Sony’s Playlink technology to make a phone or tablet a controller. That’s how players will choose what actions the protagonists takes. Players can choose dialogue options or perform more action-oriented maneuvers such as lighting a lantern.
Erica has an engaging narrative and the choices the developers give gamers can be agonizing. All of it depends on how players interpret the facts given to them and decide whom to believe as they dig deeper into the mysteries of Delphi House.
Bloober Games latest project is Blair Witch. The first-person horror game takes place two years after the events in the cult film. Players take on the role of Ellis Lynch, a former police officer with mental issues. He joins the search for a boy named Peter Shannon, who went missing in the Burkittsville, Maryland, woods.
With a dog named Bullet at his side, players will venture into the forest and immerse themselves in the creepy atmosphere. Unlike other titles in this roundup, Blair Witch moves at a slower pace. Players use the dog to sniff out for clues for the boy and they will rely on a walkie-talkie and cellphone to contact the outside world. Because it’s set in the past, players should expect the inconveniences of the 1990s, such as bad cell reception and the lack of GPS.
Visually, the game is striking and that realism will make players buy into the experience. The drawback for Blair Witch is the puzzles and its impact on exploration. Both can be obtuse, leaving players frustrated with the game’s lack of direction. It’s a delicate balancing act that Bloober doesn’t always get right.
Still, the game has its moments, but it’s more likely to be embraced and enjoyed by fans of the movie.