Are you troubled by strange noises in the middle of the night? Do you experience feelings of dread in your basement or attic? Have you or your family ever seen a spook, spectre, or ghost? If the answer is "no"... you obviously haven't been playing any of the excellent horror games on Nintendo Switch.
There's no shortage of scary games on the console, but you may well be wondering which are the best Switch horror games to load up when you're in the house alone on a darkened night and in the mood for a fright.
We've rounded up a list of the best scary Switch games — in no particular order — to get your pulse racing. Not all of them are outright horror games, but each one of these titles is a spooky treat in its own way. Don't say we didn't warn you!
On this page: Best Nintendo Switch Horror Games
The Best Horror Games On Switch
Little Nightmares II (Switch)
We quite enjoyed the original Little Nightmares, but the sequel — the appropriately titled Little Nightmares II — is the pick of the pair in our book. It's nothing less than engaging from start to finish, with superb pacing, entertainingly varied level design, and excellent graphics and performance.
Its only real flaws are based on the imprecision that comes with all games in its sub-genre, as well as a few sections that feel more about trial-and-error than reactive survival. In our view, though, this doesn't detract from a far superior sequel and one of the best cinematic platformers we've had the privilege of enjoying. A real stylish treat.
Resident Evil Revelations Collection (Switch)
This series is granddaddy of survival horror games, so it's obviously going to feature on this list. Resident Evil Revelations Collection combines both the original 3DS title Revelations and Revelations 2 (although the sequel is a download code if you buy physical, so beware) and provides some excellent over-the-shoulder scares.
Both are available separately on the eShop and the latter is ideal for co-op if you have a friend. In fact, we'd recommend you bring someone else along - it might be less scary that way.
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Layers of Fear: Legacy (Switch eShop)
Layers of Fear: Legacy is a horrifying walking simulator in which you have to explore the house of a mad painter.
The scares are psychological here, and even a simple pan of the camera can alter the environment considerably. You'll be terrified to take a simple step in this artistic mind-messer; the creativity in its scares helps to keep you guessing about what’s around every corner, and even then, its unique set-pieces will most certainly surprise you anyway.
Slightly lacklustre gameplay aside, the plot’s descent into madness and the title’s dedication to messing with your expectations to set up a scare mean that this horrific experience is one you won’t want to miss out on.
Observer (Switch eShop)
Despite threatening to fizzle under the weight of its reverence for Blade Runner, Observer manages to craft an impressive and affecting horror experience on Switch that doesn’t outstay its welcome. It’s arguably at its best when you surrender to the barrage of imagery and sounds rather than scanning pools of blood with detective vision.
This port walks a technical tightrope and falters a little in docked mode, but fares much better as a handheld experience – its ambition and rich world-building are admirable enough to make up for any technical shortcomings.
As for the scare factor, well, everyone’s going to have their own personal scale when it comes to what makes you moisten your trousers, but if dread, unease, and a total lack of predictability sound like your cup of tea, you could be looking forward to a long, sleepless night after playing this one.
Outlast: Bundle of Terror (Switch eShop)
The original Outlast: Bundle of Terror proved that indie developers can do survival horror – and do it well. You play as the freelance journalist Miles Upshur, who decides to stop writing about Brexit and new-age diets and go looking for a story inside a long-abandoned asylum. However, it might not be quite as abandoned as it looks...
If you like the original there's also Outlast 2 to consider. It takes place in the same universe as the original, but has you playing as a husband and wife investigative journalists Blake and Lynn Langermann. Armed with only a camera, you have to investigate the mysterious death of an unknown pregnant woman. Nothing can go wrong there, surely?
Both Outlast games are must-have experiences for those who love to be scared witless, although the first one is perhaps the best. Still, the sequel is worth a look when you're finished filling your unmentionables with...fear.
Limbo (Switch eShop)
Limbo is a brilliantly moody and expertly poised platform-puzzler that tells a harrowing story entirely without the use of words. It might be a little stark, but it's dense with ingenious physics puzzles and weighty platforming challenges.
It's pretty powerful stuff, and your imagination will run wild at what it all means. Oh, and there's an absolutely massive spider to contend with. That provides more than enough horror to earn its place here.
Detention (Switch eShop)
Detention is a horror classic that deserves a place on your Nintendo Switch. Its story has an important message behind it as it introduces themes that seem almost unfair when viewed through the eyes of a child, but that only helps to escalate the horror.
Through a terrifying atmosphere, a series of chilling ghouls, and a soundtrack that will sink its teeth into you, Detention is a suitably horrifying title that should be experienced first-hand.
Dark Souls: Remastered (Switch)
Dark Souls: Remastered might not be a strict horror game, but it's packing plenty of frights nonetheless. This is a faithful remaster of a touchstone in video game design that improves overall performance while preserving all of the character traits that made the original such a memorable experience.
While it’s no less forgiving — and its menus are a little fiddly — this slick Nintendo Switch iteration offers the only way to experience Lordran’s ultra-challenging odyssey in true handheld form. Between the daunting difficulty, horrific monsters, and a claustrophobic dark setting, Dark Souls will have you as tense as a night spent in a haunted house. Enter, if you dare!
Death Mark (Switch)
Death Mark's mystical horror setting presents itself as an exploratory adventure game, and much of your time will be spent wandering around a single predetermined location trying to find clues and objects that will help solve the case and quell the spirit's thirst for revenge without getting yourself killed in the process.
It's a rare game that can start off tense and then continuously ratchet up the mood to almost unbearable levels until the final moments of the final chapter – and an even rarer one that has enough alternative characters, dialogue, and endings to make it worth playing through more than once – but Death Mark succeeds where it really counts.
There's plenty on offer here for both horror fans as well as those looking for a mystery that requires more than hoarding knick-knacks and waiting patiently for your character to officially notice something before you can proceed.
Resident Evil Origins Collection (Switch)
The first Resident Evil remains a classic of the genre. In many ways, it is – and can only ever be – a product of its time, though. Even when tuned and honed and buffed to perfection, it has its own idiosyncratic personality and ways; change them and you change the game. Series veterans will know what to expect, but new players should prepare themselves for a schooling in game mechanics which have largely fallen out of fashion.
The same applies to Resident Evil 0, and while the original game is the obvious draw here, the prequel deserves another look, especially for fans who skipped it. Both games look great on Switch and the ability to play on-the-go helps alleviate some of the frustrations inherent to their old-fashioned systems, giving them the best possible opportunity to win you over in a modern context.
Both are available separately on the eShop, and if you buy physical you'll still have to download REmake via a code regardless. Ultimately, there's no better way to sample that original survival horror formula in 2019, provided you’ve got the stomach — and the space on your system memory — for it.
Darkwood (Switch eShop)
Darkwood is, thankfully, rather unlike any other horror game on Switch. Those with a taste for survival games will appreciate the constant pressure to salvage parts and craft new items while a clock ticks down in the background, while those with a love for all things sinister will really appreciate some of the truly disturbing moments.
Despite the occasional technical flaw, the result is a purposefully slow experience that rewards multiple playthroughs with a storyline that branches depending on just how far into madness you’re willing to tread.
Amnesia: Collection (Switch eShop)
Despite being a set that includes three entries in the same series, the Amnesia: Collection actually offers three very distinct experiences.
The Dark Descent is a milestone for the genre that belies its own mechanical issues by offering some good, old-fashioned scares. Justine is a brief but experimental foray into gruesome puzzle-solving that’s well worth the detour, and A Machine for Pigs takes a more stripped-down approach to the original’s systems, but introduces a much more immersive story as a result.
It’s a proper little time capsule that’s perfect for those who’ve already exhausted their fear glands with Outlast and Layers of Fear and want another means to chill their blood on a cold, dark winter night.
Stories Untold (Switch eShop)
Stories Untold is a chilling adventure that manages to draw us right into its world through the ingenious use of its UI and perfectly realised lo-fi aesthetic.
Through the walls of old technology and complicated machinery, it creates a uniquely strong bond between player and narrative, giving you a real sense of place within its world as it slowly corrupts and twists from the comfortingly familiar to something else entirely.
It's one of the best interactive horror stories we've ever played and a perfect fit for enjoying alone in the dark on Switch.
Alien: Isolation (Switch eShop)
Alien: Isolation is a survival horror masterpiece and straight-up one of the very best horror video games ever released.
It's a nerve-wracking affair – a slow, methodical game of cat and mouse against a brilliantly clever recreation of one of cinema's most infamous killers – but if you're up to the task you'll find one of the most satisfying gameplay experiences in the genre; a brilliant and beautiful homage to one of the greatest Sci-Fi movies of all time.
Feral Interactive has done a stellar job with this Switch port and the excellent motion controls and inclusion of all previously-released DLC only go to sweeten the deal. This is essential stuff for survival horror fans.
Doctor Who: The Lonely Assassins (Switch eShop)
Featuring the absolutely terrifying Weeping Angels – best known for the episode “Blink”, to which this game is a direct sequel – Doctor Who: The Lonely Assassins is very probably the best Doctor Who game ever made.
While you may not put the iconic (and occasionally janky) British sci-fi show in the horror genre, the pervasive influence of the aforementioned villainous statues and some quite frankly excellent writing make this 'found phone' game genuinely frightening in places. Perhaps not enough to make you weep, but certainly sufficient to have you drop your Switch due to a jump scare. Be careful!
The Walking Dead: The Complete First Season (Switch eShop)
Whether you played this back in 2012, or are completely new to the series, Telltale's The Walking Dead: The Complete First Season is a masterpiece of video game storytelling. It features some of the best voice-over performances you’ll find on any gaming platform and sets the stage for a grand, multi-season odyssey of tragic proportions.
However, this is also a satisfying and poignant collection even if you never play the subsequent episodes. Even if you lost patience with Rick Grimes and TV series adaptation of Robert Kirkman's comic books, this remains an incredible interactive adaptation of Kirkman's world of walkers.
Carrion (Switch eShop)
Carrion is a special thing in many ways — a game which puts you in the shoes (or slithering eldritch tentacles) of the game's 'boss' — but its actual meat-and-potatoes structure is as formulaic as the genre gets.
Thankfully, its core gameplay of tearing room after room of people into wet chunks of corpse never ever gets old and sustains the experience throughout. It looks superb, sounds great, and is plenty of fun to play, despite some minor issues which just hold Carrion back from the absolute upper echelons of the Switch library.
Still, if you're after a horrific Metroidvania with a twist, this one is disgustingly intriguing.
Fatal Frame: Maiden of Black Water (Switch eShop)
There's a lot to like about Fatal Frame: Maiden of Black Water (known as Project Zero in Europe). While we didn't find it overly scary, it is very good indeed at being eerie. You'll see ghosts out of the corner of your eye and when you check, they'll be gone. It's oddly cosy and non-stressful for a horror game, because your camera is such an efficient weapon and the combat it propagates is too action-packed to really let any dread sink in.
That's not necessarily a bad thing, though we found the earlier PlayStation 2 instalments of the series were more interested in actively frightening the player. Get absorbed in the storyline — which is easy to do as the episodic structure makes "just one more area" a compelling prospect — and you'll find this game's a real winner and worth snapping up if you're a horror fan who missed it on Wii U.
Dying Light Platinum Edition (Switch)
While there are some undeniable hardware limitations, Dying Light Platinum Edition nonetheless translates the full survival horror experience in all its undead glory to the Switch with impressive results and stands as quite a remarkable achievement.
Its ambitious open world full of zombies is unlike anything else in the Switch’s library and, between the core campaign and six years of constant DLC updates, there’s potentially hundreds of hours of enjoyment to be had here.
Granted, all of this comes at the cost of performance that can be middling compared to other platforms, but this is neatly balanced out by the convenience of playing in handheld mode. If you like your scares diluted with a healthy dose of open-world action, this is the game for you.
Luigi's Mansion 3 (Switch)
Okay, we've gone from horror to 'horror-themed' here, but Luigi’s Mansion 3 is not only a graphical powerhouse and showcase for Next Level Games’ unrivalled mastery of video game animation, but it’s also an immense helping of spooky fun as well.
The amount of care and consideration poured into every facet of the game is abundantly clear, and it all results in one of the most enjoyable and attractive Switch titles of the year. It's also the undisputed high point of a franchise which – following this sterling release – will hopefully get even more love and attention from Nintendo fandom, and the gaming community as a whole.
We know what you're thinking, and no, it's definitely not exactly an outright horror game, but if you're after a spooky title that you can play with the kids, Luigi's Mansion 3 is perfect.
Inside (Switch eShop)
Inside is the spiritual successor to Limbo, and it builds on its predecessor in every imaginable way possible. A grimly beautiful platform-puzzler that, while brief, is packed full of jaw-dropping highlights, its dark tone won't be for everyone, but it's all been executed brilliantly, with gently taxing physics-based conundrums woven into a haunting wordless narrative.
It's a very similar game to its predecessor in many ways, with side-scrolling elements, a gorgeous, moody art style, and a vulnerable protagonist at the heart of it. Everything's just bigger, better, and way more affecting.
Signalis (Switch eShop)
Signalis came out of nowhere to provide survival horror fans a near-perfect love letter to the long-running genre. It is at its best when you're darting between enemies, using stealth and patience rather than brute force. While some of the combat encounters felt a little forced, the puzzles are just the right mix of challenging and approachable.
The surreal imagery and unique storytelling structure here add to the overall polish of a game that is the perfect length for what it is. There have been an awful lot of homages to classic survival horror, but Signalis stands as one of the best.
The Mummy Demastered (Switch eShop)
They say don't judge a book by its cover, and you shouldn't judge this game based on its tie-in movie. WayForward's The Mummy Demastered deserves to stand on its own as one of the best examples of not only a retro-styled pixel art aesthetic, but as an excellent combination of run 'n' gunning, platforming and exploration. The game benefits from paying homage to multiple 16-bit ancestors rather than strictly sticking to its celluloid source material; The Mummy Demastered is a polished, accomplished and satisfying adventure that will entertain more than just Metroidvania fans.
Afterdream (Switch eShop)
Afterdream is a trippy puzzle game that takes all the iconic hallmarks of classic survival horror games (minus the survival part) and crams them into a cute yet entirely unsettling package. The game makes great use of the camera mechanic to reveal secrets and scares, and while it doesn't go quite as freakishly horrifying as we'd perhaps like, the overarching atmosphere more than makes up for this.
If you're after something spooky that's not going to outright scare the living daylights out of you, then this is definitely one to check out.
Ghostbusters: The Video Game Remastered (Switch)
Another entry that's more spoopy than genuinely spooky, we could hardly exclude the 'busters, could we!?
Your enjoyment of Ghostbusters: The Video Game Remastered will depend almost entirely on your affection for the movies – we love 'em (and we're more than happy to rigorously defend Ghostbusters II if you want to hear us bang on about it for an hour down the pub), so this game is a wonderful form of time travel.
Mechanically speaking, there's little you haven’t seen elsewhere, but it’s a good-looking, fun third-person romp dripping in slimy spooks and nostalgia, and the chance to spend time in the company of these old friends – some of them dearly departed – is too good to pass up if you've ever strapped on your school backpack and gone out to catch ghosts in the garden.
Need even more nostalgic paranormal entrapment in your life? We've got you covered...
Ghostbusters: Spirits Unleashed - Ecto Edition (Switch)
Launching on Switch a year after its debut on other platforms, Ghostbusters: Spirits Unleashed - Ecto Edition douses its thoroughly serviceable online 4v1 gameplay in positively charged psychomagnotheric nostalgia slime.
From small touches in the visuals to snippets of dialogue, the detail and care that has gone into recreating the Ghostbusters’ world here makes you forgive the occasional visual glitch and basic, predictable plot.
If 'busting makes you feel good, you'll have a great time with this one, even if it's not strictly a 'horror' game in the blood-curdling, spine-tingling sense.
You made it? Well done. Here we'll answer some common questions readers have when it comes to getting your scares with Switch.
Switch Horror Games FAQ
Does Nintendo have any horror games?
Nintendo itself? Hmm, not really. As you can see above, the Switch console hosts plenty of horror games, but Luigi's Mansion is the closest thing Nintendo itself has to a horror franchise of its own, and that's most definitely a kid-friendly spookfest. An excellent series, but not one that's going to genuinely scare you. Famicom Detective Club has some unsettling moments, but it's not a horror game per se.
Nintendo has published several scary games in the past, though, including Fatal Frame: Maiden of Black Water on Wii U (the Switch port was published by Koei Tecmo, though) and the genuinely terrifying Eternal Darkness on GameCube. The platform holder retains the IP rights to Eternal Darkness, so it's possible — if unlikely — that Nintendo could return to 'proper' horror again sometime in the future.
More recently, Nintendo launched Emio - The Smiling Man: Famicom Detective Club on the Switch which, thanks to its creepy initial marketing, led many to believe that it would be a full-fledged horror game. As it is, it's a pretty standard detective adventure title, albeit with some horror elements attached.
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Will 'The Last of Us' come to Switch?
Erm, no. The Last of Us was developed by Naughty Dog, a Sony-owned subsidiary of PlayStation Studios since 2001. As such, The Last of Us franchise is a Sony first-party exclusive, so regardless of how popular its critically acclaimed sequels and spin-off HBO series are, you won't be seeing The Last of Us on Nintendo Switch or a Nintendo anything. Sorry!
Is every 'Resident Evil' game on Switch?
No. To start with, there are plenty of Resident Evil titles not yet available on Switch; most notably the original trilogy from the PS1 and N64 era.
Otherwise, Capcom has elected to release several cloud versions of its more recent RE entries: Resident Evil 2 - Cloud Version, Resident Evil 3 - Cloud Version, Resident Evil 7: Biohazard Cloud, and Resident Evil Village Cloud. The reason for this is likely that these games simply can't run natively on the Switch without some significant sacrifices to visuals and performance.
So you should be extra careful if you decide to opt for the cloud versions. Try the demos first and be absolutely sure that you're wi-fi connection can handle the cloud streaming. We're hopeful that Capcom will release native versions of the games on 'Switch 2', but nothing has been announced at the time of writing.
Is the 'Silent Hill 2' remake on Switch?
Nope. The Silent Hill 2 remake from Konami and Bloober Team is currently only available on PS5 and PC. This is a timed exclusive, mind you, and will likely become available on Xbox Series X|S toward the end of 2025 at the earliest. A 'Switch 2' release might be on the cards by that point, but we'll just have to wait and see.
Speaking of Silent Hill, there aren't any games from the franchise at all on the Switch. In fact, the only titles to release on Nintendo platforms were Silent Hill: Shattered Memories on the Wii, and a curious GBA game called Silent Hill Play Novel, made available exclusively in Japan.
Are any of your favourites missing from this list? It's an ever-evolving beast we'll add to periodically whenever a worthy game rears its ugly head, so share your favourite recommendations in the comments section below.
This article is one of our Switch Essentials guides which cover a wide variety of genres, including the Best Switch FPS Games, the Best Switch RPGs, the Best Switch Games For Kids, the Best Switch Couch Co-Op Games and the Best Switch Fitness and Exercise Games. We can also help out hunting down the Best Switch Horror Games, the Best Switch Racing Games, the Best Switch Action-RPGs, the Best Nintendo Switch Roguelikes, Roguelites and Run-Based Games, the Best Free Switch Games, the Best Remakes And Remasters, the Best Switch Music And Rhythm Games, Best Feel-Good Switch Games, Best Switch Open-World Games, Best Switch Soulslike Games, Best LGBTQ+ Switch Games, and even Games to Play After You've Finished Zelda: Breath of the Wild.
Whatever your favourite genre, we've got you covered: Strategy Games, Metroidvanias, Puzzle Games, Party Games, Online Multiplayer Games, Local Wireless Multiplayer Games, Shmups, Twin-Stick Shooters, Visual Novels, Kart Racers, Fighting Games, Football Games, Funny Games, Golf Games, 'Walking Sims' And Narrative Games, Switch Games For Lovers And Lonely Hearts, Detective Games, Hidden Gems, 2D Platformers, 3D Platformers, Puzzle Platformers, Tabletop Mode Games, Run and Gun Games, LEGO Games, Sports Games, Survival Games, Beat 'Em Ups, Camera Games, Chill Games, Family Games, Retro-Inspired Games, Short Games, Card Games and Deck-Builders, and Life Sims And Farming Games.
Still hungry for more? Elsewhere we look at Wholesome Games, TATE Mode Games, Flight Sim and Space Combat, Point and Click Adventure Games, and the Best Switch Exclusives, as well as Every Arcade Archives Game, Every ACA Neo Geo Game, Every SEGA AGES Game On Switch, plus the Best Switch Ports, Best Wii U-To-Switch Ports, Best Switch Collections And Compilations, Best Cheap Switch Games, Best Switch Demos, Games That Are Better On Switch OLED, Switch Games Under $10, $20, $50, and Switch games with the Best Soundtracks and the Best Graphics. Phew!
If you're looking for the best Switch games regardless of genre, our reader-voted selection of the Best Nintendo Switch Games To Play In 2023 should help you out, and you can also find the Best Nintendo Switch Games of 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022 and 2023. And finally, if you're interested in other Nintendo consoles and retro games, check out the Best Game Boy Games, Best GBC Games, Best GBA Games, Best Nintendo DS Games, Best Nintendo 3DS Games, Best NES Games, Best SNES Games, Best N64 Games, Best GameCube Games, and Best Wii Games, and Best Wii U Games, as well as Every Available Nintendo Switch Online Retro Game, and ranked lists of Every Nintendo Switch Online NES, SNES, N64 and Sega Genesis / Mega Drive Game.
Up Next: Kart Racers
- Related Games
- Amnesia: Collection (Switch eShop)
- Carrion (Switch eShop)
- Crow Country (Switch eShop)
- Dark Souls: Remastered (Switch)
- Darkwood (Switch eShop)
- Death Mark (Switch)
- Detention (Switch eShop)
- Doctor Who: The Lonely Assassins (Switch eShop)
- Dying Light Platinum Edition (Switch)
- Fatal Frame: Maiden of Black Water (Switch eShop)
- Fear the Spotlight (Switch eShop)
- Ghostbusters: Spirits Unleashed - Ecto Edition (Switch)
- Ghostbusters: The Video Game Remastered (Switch)
- Inside (Switch eShop)
- Killing Time: Resurrected (Switch eShop)
- Layers of Fear: Legacy (Switch eShop)
- Limbo (Switch eShop)
- Little Nightmares II (Switch)
- Luigi's Mansion 3 (Switch)
- Observer (Switch eShop)
- Outlast 2 (Switch eShop)
- Outlast: Bundle of Terror (Switch eShop)
- Pumpkin Jack (Switch eShop)
- Resident Evil 4 (Switch eShop)
- Resident Evil Origins Collection (Switch)
- Resident Evil Revelations Collection (Switch)
- RetroRealms: Ash vs Evil Dead (Switch eShop)
- Signalis (Switch eShop)
- The Walking Dead: The Complete First Season (Switch eShop)
- World of Horror (Switch eShop)
- See Also
Comments 203
No Vroom in the Night Sky?
This list is a joke.
The Coma isn't on this list.
I do like a good horror game, I think both Outlast games has some of the most messed up horror gaming in them that I have ever played, Love it!!
Inside--seriously good.
I was going to play Little Nightmares...but apparently it's not scary enough for this list
Wow... Spooky. Like 3 games on the list could be considered scary, but no one is afraid of 2d pixels.
Kind of a boring list in my opinion. Nothing against the article but the lack of good horror games on switch. Imagine if We had a true vc how much better this could've been. ( zombies ate my neighbors, castlevania etc).
I played the prologue on the 24th and started playing one in game day each day after that. That'll actually put me on the in-game Halloween festival "Harfest" on Halloween. I love Night in the Woods, and I want a sequel! The story and the fact it takes place in fall also make it the perfect fall/Halloween game.
Bulb Boy? Nah.
I really enjoyed both Detention and Oxenfree; fascinating tales about how past misdeeds can taint the present. Detention can get quite disturbing at certain points and Oxenfree's dialog mechanic is pretty great.
Limbo, on the other hand, just gave me cheap deaths, underused mechanics and a story that was just a barely there pile of nonsense. A total waste of money, in my opinion.
Going too try bulb boy
Dark Souls is a horror game now?
@MagnaRoader 2D pixels?!?! AAAHHHH!!!
When you realize the Switch does not have a single retail horror game...
And plz stop making lists plz.
Dark souls isn't scary, and where is little nightmares?
If you're putting Dark Souls on that list (number 1 no less) then you might as well throw Skyrim on there, lol
After all dark souls does have a very 'army of darkness' vibe to it which is a horror comedy
@Giygas_95 I couldn't agree more about a sequel. The quality of this game is so immense I would put it up there with the likes of Mario Odyssey, Xenoblade 2 and Mario Kart 8 Deluxe in terms of must have titles.
Oxenfree is a good game to and its length makes it perfect for a Halloween play through.
Outlast series looks to sadistic for me. Not my thing.
I almost didn't make it to the end of Bulb Boy - it's beyond disgusting!
@Vapeguy Yes, Skyrim should easily be able to make that list considering what else has made the cut.
Played Limbo yesterday. A real work of art.
Today Bulb Boy - I can highly recommend it for halloween.
Next will be Little Nightmare
Played through Layers of Fear yesterday in a single long sitting so can recommend that to people as a good source of creepiness.
Oxenfree is also class as a Halloween game.
Gotta give Little Nightmares a whirl- didnt release physically over here in the US so had import it- i know its not a Switch game but gotta give Killer Instinct on the XB a shout out for Halloween games- Sabrewulf vs Spinal in 4k on the XBX
I just started playing Diablo 3 on Switch, this will be my Halloween game. This game was leaked today, but I will be buying the retail cart when it's selling in the store.
@bluemage1989 This is my third play through of the game, and I'm currently doing the first hangout with Gregg, which I've never actually done before. I just dropped the crate and Gregg down the stairs a whole bunch just to see what he and Mae would say to each other. XD I restarted it so I can see what happens when you actually do it right.
Prices are way too high for these games, save for the couple of indies. 50 bucks for Doom on Switch vs 10 bucks for Doom on PS4 with better graphics. Also Resident Evil 7, The Evil Within 2 and Bloodborne are having criminally low prices right now. I’m sorry Nintendo, but I have to give it to PS4 for the horror nights.
I hope an exclusive quality horror game will come out for the Switch some day. Just like Project Zero for the Wii U.
@Giygas_95 funnily enough I'm on my third play through also doing an all Greg play through as I've only seen a little of his side and so far id say it is just as great as Bea's side.
After the great response I'm not sure why there has been no hint of a sequel.
No thanks. I'll head back to ZombiU on, of course, the WIi U.
The switch is missing some Project Zero, I'm surprised they didn't port maiden of the blackwater to switch, I thought it was quite a good game that didn't get the audience it deserved on Wii U. Also Koei Tecmo are happy to bring every Warriors game under the sun to Switch so you would think they would be quite used to the porting process now.
I would put outlast 1 & 2 on spine chilling like Silent Hill the original that gave me the creeps literally and that was on the PS. Doom series is more of shoot'em horror game instead.
wish the list had consisted of games thare are or had coming out this and last month, a good portion of these games had been out for a while
I will recognize that Binding of Isaac falls less under "Creepy" and more like "Incredibly Disturbing", I mean, no matter how many times you play it, a baby running around doing some (and having some) gruesome shnizzit is pretty bad, it wasn't very fun, I see the unique novelty that drew/draws so many people to it, but take away some of it and it was pretty boring for me, it was the first (and as yet only) Switch game I have traded away
(remember this is "personal opinion", so no one get insulted like some people do here)
...No Knock-Knock? It's not exactly scary, but it was quite creepy...
@MagnaRoader The remake of Corpse Party, a 2D pixel art horror put together in RPG Maker, scared the bejeebers out of me. So yes, 2D pixel games can be very effective. Not super keen on the one coming to Switch, though, with the chibi 3D style.
Well I watched the youtube player for Outlast and that was creepy enough for me. I did order 1 & 2 but man just watching and hearing him play was more than enough. Some games gives you the willies and some are just let's blast them to hell.
Don’t let the list fool you into believing this is a good list. Layers of Fear: Legacy deserves to be up higher and Little Nightmares also deserves to be on this list. And take out Dark Souls for goodness sakes! The Outlast games are arguably the best produced AAA horror titles on the Switch so why so low for 2? Anyway, I love horror games.
Since were on the topic I would love to see Five Nights at Freddy’s games (if they count) come to Switch as well as Amnesia! Also might as well ask for Silent Hill lol
I'd strongly recommend The Missing and Black Bird.
@jhewitt3476 For mie it was just too hard
@mgnoodle
it was incredibly frustrating, but also trying to play through, it was just Very unfulfilling also
Just seen the list on the official Switch channel. It's quite a lot better - but this features more, er, deep cuts.
No Kona on the list, bad list.
Cya
Raziel-chan
Where did "little nightmares" go?! Why is it not on the eShop!?
Fairly decent collection of games. In my experience, Silent Hill 2 was the absolute best at creating an atmosphere of fear. Pyramid Head is an iconic villian — imagine him following you around in the dark.
@nintendobynature castlevania ain’t horror tho. Just a gothic setting.
Shouldn’t Mario Odyssey be on this list? Those nipples!!!
Dark Souls is actually really creepy, although at the same time it’s very over the top, not taking itself too seriously. Some of the NPC’s feel like their taken straight from some campy B-horror movie and I love it!
Little nightmare where are thou
Oxenfree is gash. Don't bother.
Dark Souls No. 1!? Ah, Amazon...
when i think of Horror games. i think of something jump scaring me. like outlast.
@Skalgrim I hear you I was just speaking in general terms. Either way, it should be able to be played on switch is all I was saying.
@bluemage1989 I sure hope it happens. I badly want to see what Mae does next. I don't feel like the first game gave her a conclusive enough ending. At least if she had gotten a job that would have been something. I felt like the game ended too suddenly.
Truly the Dark Souls of Halloween game lists.
My own top 5 in order
Layers of Fear
Outlast 1
Outlast 2
Detention
Resident Evil Revelations
Inside would certainly be in there but it's not horror. Neither is Doom or Dark Souls. Bulboy is alright and Oxenfree was absolutely terrible.
I feel like Dark Souls is somewhat forced in here, much like many other games, while some real under-the-radar horror games that aren't half bad are once again left out of the spotlight.
A few games are discounted until Halloween... But my payday isn't until halfway next month and I don't have the spare cash now.
Trying to resist the temptation is a horror unto itself.
I've plumped for Bulb Boy and Inside on the current discounts. Worth mentioning that the (currently discounted?) Cave Story+ has a delightful (but not scary) seasonal Halloween theme right now! And co-op on Switch. Defintely worth the upgrade from the free PC version whilst on discount.
There is a Halloween sale on the eShop right now with a few more suggestions. I have played Detention for a bit. Haven't gotten to the scary parts, yet. But I like the atmosphere so far.
The other game I bought is Agatha Knife. It more gross and disturbing instead of scary so far. I like how weird an off beat it is.
@OorWullie I was beginning to think I was the only one who didn't like Oxenfree.
Soo.... Fatal Frame when?
@Kimyonaakuma I was one of the few that didnt enjoy that game.
@BANJO Right?! There are some seriously creepy and or scary moments in Skyrim
@Jack_Goetz Same here, with all of its near universal praise I expected something quite different, it's good if you like talking games I guess..
So did you change the list, but leave the original comments? 🤔
@Razzy
Kona looks interesting. Is it really that scary or just a just a bit spooky/mysterious?
Games with a spooky vibe I like but the really scary games, not so much. I've made exceptions for Dead Space 1 and 2 on PC though.
I'd add The Count Lucanor to the list, I'm not sure I'd have Dark Souls on this list either.
Is Hellblade not on the list because it wasn't yet released on Switch when this was compiled?
Where’s Night Trap?
Dark Souls? Friday the 13th?
This list just reveals how weak Nintendo Switch's horror game library currently is.
@Rapido
I hope for it every day!
Deadly Premonition
@Kimyonaakuma Little Nightmares is the first on the list. Maybe they meant to have it on the list and fixed it.
Where's Luigi's Mansion 3?
Everybody forgets Kona.
I think Ghostbusters deseves a place on the list. I was hoping Alien Isolation would have released for Halloween.
@Gwynbleidd Are you thinking of Slayaway Camp? the Friday the 13th Game isn't on mobile.
You open the article with a direct quote from Ghostbusters yet don't have the Ghostbusters Remastered game on the list....
Thumper is classified as a horror game, so I'm sticking with that. lol
EDIT: Wait, this was from last year...? What happened, I'm confused. >.<
I’m curious about welcome to hanwell. It’s on sale and I kinda want it but I’m concerned about the Y inversion and if it’s in the game or not.
This is an old article that has been updated, which is why you are seeing comments asking where X game is when you are seeing it on the list.
Detention is one of my favorites! Def eerie game. 👀🧐
alien isolation will be the king of Nintendo best horror games forever after the release
just finished hellblade senua's sacrifice and that could qualify as horror game ,in fact it's one of the most disturbing game I have ever played.
Added Stories Untold
No Alien Isolation
It's strange, it's not a genre that I really really like but I have played and enjoyed a fair fw in that list because they are just basically high quality video games.
Such as: Resi Evil 4 (especially Wii Edition, one of my fav all time games), RE Revelations, Alien Isolation, Limbo & Inside. Stories Untold is on my wishlist, haven't got round to downloading it yet.
I loved Luigi's mansion 3 and Ghostbusters Wii (a Switch version exists as well, as you know) for the cartoony fun, horror/thriller video games
@BigKing The Coma has a psychical release as I bought it £10 in Argus. Also Remothered is another I own.
Not included Remothered ‘Tormented Fathers in that list is just criminal as it’s far scarier then 90% of the games in your list. The Spider in the Limbo and the long haired ghost girl who frowns you in Inside are the only scary things in those game.
Granted Remothered has flaws such as the killers hanging around the rooms in the house you need to be. And the Mirrors only healing Laura so much before they crack. Still the best survival horror game since Maiden of the Dark Water
Sinking city is on my list with Outlast. SC has its issues, but it has an interesting open world and the most scared I've been in a boss fight since the early silent hill games. Frogware said that Silent Hill was one of its influencers when making this game. It's rough at times, but we've been loving it.
Interesting how horror games are not really a genre I am super interested in, yet I have played and enjoyed around seven on the above list. Not just the Resi Evil games either. Inside, Limbo, Alien Isolation etc... They're quality video games
@OorWullie
The original Doom 3 is
Played it back than at Night, my God, those Sounds.
I just don't like the BFG Version and can't recommend it.
Rather the original with HD-Texture Mods.
Also Doom 64 has a very dark Mood.
What about the Australian version of Control? "Your internet isn't fast enough" is probably the scariest phrase you can see in a single player game.
I really like resident evil revelations 1
Some times Outlast: Bundle of Terror I think about getting it.
Shoutout to DOOM 64, and those who play without save states like on an original Nintendo 64.
Alien Isolation is the scariest game I've ever played. Should be on this list
Is there a game among these that could be compared to Shadow Man (N64) or Eternal Darkness (GCN)? In terms of atmosphere and plot. I'm more into psychological horror than visually scary stuff.
Where tf is fnaf???
Bought Resident Evil Revelations 2 for last Halloween but never actually got around to playing it... but I am this year. My wife actually asked me could I play something else the other night, because I was jumping so much in bed lol recommendEd with the lights off, and headphones on... Happy Halloween!
Awwww no Luigi love?
The Project Zero saga belongs to Nintendo now, right? Why don´t they bring the whole thing over to Switch?? I want remasters of the original trilogy! Also a port of V.
And a new entry, of course...
Holding out for the day someone makes an "Obscure" Double Pack port, with online co-op. Maybe one day.
@RichyM agreed!!
What a horrible list. At least add Death Mark.or Spirit Hunter: NG.
Yay! Friday the 13th The Game! Love that game I can get lost in it for hours at a time. Love how each round is always a different outcome no matter what happens (as long as everyone is playing seriously because the fun completely stops when people aren't).
Would love to try Little Nightmares, but when it’s £4.99 on the PlayStation store and still full price on the eShop, I’ll pass
Very surprised Yomawari isn't here. Definitely deserves a spot.
My two favorite are Curse of the Moon 1 and 2.
Weird that they missed out Alien Isolation which is one of the creepiest games on the system.
Would also love to see a project zero game (not the 3DS one) on switch.
2Dark is another indie game that would be great to play on the go
@Boshar @ChaosBadger777 @BishopShiozawa @Jester151 Page 2, people!
Doki Doki Literature Club.
@dartmonkey you bet add MURDER HOUSE to this list QUICK or imma flip out
I need to get my 360 copy of Ghostbusters the game back from my cousin, he's had it for years now. I've had a hankering to play it again.
No Haunted Halloween '86?
Speaking of horror, Namco needs to hire someone to crank out a new Splatterhouse game. Maybe even a 2D throwback-style game. That would be sick.
@GannonBanned Murder House is great! Haven't gotten that far yet, but I love the PS1/VHS aesthetic.
@__dave Haunted Halloween was great. I also enjoyed Savage Halloween, and Halloween Forever, which offer similarly spooky 8-bit platforming.
@james_squared Is that game not on the switch ? I've got zombi on the PS4 assumed they would've ported it to switch if they ported it to PS4
@OldManHermit I’m probably about half done with the game I reckon (have cleared out half the rooms and basement) and MAN this game makes me PANIC
Playing Dying LIght at the moment. It's so impressive. The humble Switch is working overtime.
I just picked up Persistence for $6, hope it's worth it. Reviews look good!
I gotta restart Luigi's Mansion. I got stuck at a part where a redneck ghost is floating in a pool or something, and gave up. Jumping back in a year later and I can't remember the controls or story anymore
The best Horror games I played on the Switch so far:
1. Alien Isolation.
2. Outlast II.
3. Doom 3.
So many snooty people in the comments. I think it was a great list
@Would_you_kindly I don't think it's on the Switch and I wouldn't think it'd be ported as it's getting a bit old. I think it was originally a WiiU exclusive. I guess anything is possible with Ubisoft.
ZombieU was actually the game that got me most interested in the potential of the Wii U
@HeroponRiki i doubt you are scaried in luigis mansion 3 but its on my top 10 as top 1 anyway
@AcridSkull the count lucandor is not a horror game its a adventure rpg
Just coming off of playing both Outlast games on Switch and have to say these were some of the creepiest and downright uncomfortable (in a good way given the genre) experiences I've ever had. Alien Isolation remains my top game in the genre, and the Switch version is great, but Outlast is way scarier to me. The gore that goes way overboard is a big reason for this.
Not the scariest or best playing, but, Deadly Premonition definitely has a soft spot in my heart. Some pretty chilling scenes in that game and left me missing the town when done. A game I'll be remembering for a long time.
The House in Fata Morgana should qualify for this given its subject matter
@talllennart yes it is. More importantly though, why are you replying to a 2.5 year old comment?
So...wait....you have Alien: Isolation pictured on the tease, but it's not here? You also neglected to put Alien: Isolation in the games with the Switch's best graphics, even though it looks DEMONSTRABLY better than the PS4 and Xbox One versions. Did Alien: Isolation pee in your Cheerios or something?
EDIT- MY BAD! I failed to see this article had two pages.
I have to ask since nowhere reports it. I've played RE4 on so many platforms and have beaten it around 30-40 times. The switch version never has normal enemies drop ammo is this the same for other players? I have to beat the game using only the scripted ammo drops in containers and lying on tables and benches in the game world and it just sucks. I just played 2 chapters on PC and got DOZENS of ammo drops. On switch i only get money. Is this the normal behavior for anyone else?
Just want to say that I've loved Dusk '82 and regular Dusk. Dusk '82 kept me glued to my Switch for 3 or 4 hours loving the music and Atari 2600, but better, style of gameplay. A nice mix of puzzling and sort of turn based action.
Dusk is a stunning 1st person shooter on Switch! Really fun gameplay and buttery 60fps action. And both games look incredible on the OLED Switch! and both are Halloween approved!
Wow, I expected to see one comedic horror game, but instead we got two!
Alien: Isolation was one of my first legitimate horror games. Just imagine a survival-horror Metroid game in the style of Alien: Isolation. Metroid Prime, but in the same sort of stealth as Metroid Dread. Not only would it be something very cool, but it would definitely bring the Metroid series back full circle with its Alien franchise roots.
Good list except you're missing Doom 3, Blair Witch, Doki Doki Literature Club Plus, Corpse Killer, Dusk, Layers of Fear 2, White Night, Tormented Souls and World War Z
@Yasume You mean like Fatal Frame: Maiden of the Black Water? Your future wishes have been granted.
@120frames-please Yeah, I pre-ordered Dusk from LRG. Can't wait.. which of course I'll be doing for at least 6 months 😅
@JustMonika It's so good. I'm sure you'll love it whenever it arrives.
@Ocaz That's strange. I'll have to get Resi 4 out and see what drops I get. I've never noticed that before, but I also haven't played it very much on my Switch.
@120frames-please I deleted my save data and redownloaded the game and still I’ve gotten very few ammo drops from enemies. I’m kinda curious why it’s this bad. Doing the opening village fight on pc I get a ton of handgun ammo drops but on switch I got nothing but money.
Did I miss something? No Metroid Dread?
@roboshort Maybe no one considers it a horror game. I mean I recommended Dusk, and it's not really a horror game either, but it has more horror elements than Metroid 5, I think.
@Ocaz I'm not at home, but if I can remember I'll dig out my Resi 4 cartridge and see what drops I get. Are you using the same difficulty level across systems?
@120frames-please yup playing normal. Fighred id get more drops
@120frames-please Metroid 5 is definitely a horror game. It has all the elements of good horror.
It’s far more a horror game than Luigi’s Mansion 3 or Dark Souls.
People consider Thumper a horror game, so I'm suggesting that one. lol
@roboshort Yeah I can see that.
@Joeynator3000 Thumper is very good at creating what I'd imagine a bad trip is like. Pretty disturbing! Very well done game, but disturbing too.
@Ocaz @120frames-please So I tried Resident Evil 4 yesterday and of course only got money from killed villagers. It does suck to run out of ammo and get stabbed to death by pitchfork wielding country folk.
@120frames-please so it isn’t just me! And u aren’t missing many shots either I’m guessing. Anything above 70% accuracy should be given ammo drops but apparently not on switch! That’s the main reason I don’t like the switch version. You eventually are forced to stop playing.
@Ocaz I don't know what my accuracy was, but it wasn't good. I'd doubt I hit 70%
Removed - flaming/arguing
@AcridSkull the article was brought back and updated, so new people will see old comments. There’s no need to defensive about new answers.
Removed - unconstructive
@120frames-please dang well with the dynamic difficulty the game has u should be getting more ammo drops if you are below 70
@AcridSkull why that hostile the article was brought back and updated
@talllennart why don't you comment on that then instead of badgering me.
Yomawari series, The Count of Lucanor, Blair Witch, Oxenfree, Call of Cthulhu, etc.
@MagnaRoader have you played Lone Survivor? That's an incredible 2D survival. It's a shame it's not on the switch (i think), but it is on the Wii U.
Where is OMORI? Best horror game ever.
Detention is a horrible little game. Scared the crap out of me early on and never tried it again since
Didn’t read all the comments to see if it was included, but DOOM 3 should easily be at the top of this list. I think it’s one of the greatest FPS games on the switch, never mind just for horror games. Just a PERFECT game, and maybe my favorite DOOM experience.
There are only two ways I can play a horror game. I can either avoid death at all costs and be perpetually on the verge of a heart attack, or I can occasionally make a suicidal charge at whatever's trying to kill me to remind myself that there are no actual consequences.
How can you have forgotten NUN MASSACRE and MURDER HOUSE?! And while you’re at it, BLOOD WASH.
Honorable mention, AMONG THE SLEEP.
I'd add tormented souls , don't know how it performs on switch but really enjoyed it on my ps4
My apologies for replying to old posts! 😂. I deleted my previous message.
Alien Isolation is missing from the ‘related games’ list (making it look like it isn’t listed).
I really enjoyed Tormented Souls on Switch. It plays very much like Resident Evil 1-3 (with a bit of Silent Hill etc. added here and there).
The game has the same attention to detail in the environments as Resident Evil 2 and 3 and the combat system is actually better (more tense) imo.
Just be ready for a lot exploration, backtracking and really challenging puzzles (just like in the good old days).
joy con drift. booga booga booga!
For anyone looking for a smaller budget spooky game but not too spooky:
I really enjoyed the 2 games from DYA Games: Viviette and Evil Tonight. Nice 2D pixelated puzzle / thriller games, I saw them as 2D versions of Resident Evil games. Great for a spooky afternoon or evening.
There are quite a few of these games that are not horror games at all.
Brought my Switch into class to allow my university students in Japan to play Luigi's Mansion 3, and they were wholly enraptured by the charm and animation.
@BigKing You're so right. My physical copies of Death Mark and Dying Light just disappeared from my shelf.
Slender: the Arrival is a great one if you want to be scared as hell with a friend! Scarier than some of these. Even more scary on the Wii U using a Wii remote to control your flashlight
@NeonPizza "My favorites ghoulish Hallow-nasties on Switch would be >
Curse of the Moon 1&2
Splatterhouse - (Arcade) from 'Namco Museum'
Ghosts n' Goblins Ressurection
Castlevania Anniversary Collection
Zombies ate my Neighbours
Shade Man's stage from 'Mega Man 7' (MM Legacy 2)"
I own all of these on Switch as well, and I appreciate your old-school frame of mind!
Now I know this is an unpopular opinion, but Alan Wake on Switch, from my experience in handheld with it, is a perfectly enjoyable and well written horror game which, I'm going to say it, despite its obvious visual downgrades, still looks great at times (and yes, terrible at other times). It runs just fine, it plays great, it moves at a fantastic pace, and its story is always a joy to return to.
Alright, at full asking price for the Switch version, I can imagine being a bit sour about it. But I managed to pick it up before they corrected the Mexican eshop price (23,99 MXN, divide by 20 to have an idea what the € or $ price is). I would have loved gyro aim in it as well. But even RE4 on Switch still doesn't have it (which is a terrible oversight, making me not even WANT one of my favourite games on the handheld... I know, double standards, but the price, and the fact that they have implemented motion controls in some other versions of the game...).
So yeah, Alan Wake is perfectly fine (which definitely does not equal "perfect") if you allow yourself to just enjoy the game in handheld, and not count pixels and frames all the time, compare with better versions, or let some other technical issues spoil a good story with good gameplay.
Other than that, most of the better ones are on the list I suppose, but there's more if you're a little bit forgiving and can enjoy despite some technical flaws here and there (and I still think Gamecube / PS2 is one of the best generations for horror, and my graphical expectations haven't really updated since then, only when it comes to lighting effects for atmosphere).
The best survival horror game on Switch right now is Alien Isolation, followed by Outlast II, and the RE4. Try those to get the best experience of horror on the Switch.
@JHDK agreed
When you put Luigi's mansion 3 on a horrorgame list, you show everyone that you have no clue 😂
Also. The only thing scary or horrorlike thing about Dark Souls is the difficulty.
This list makes me sad. 🥺
Darkwood absolutely amazing crafting survival horror game very punishing and has multiple endings would recommend its cheap as well
Wait... Where is Corpse Party, huh!? You've included Dark Souls Remastered on this list, but there is no Corpse Party!? Also, what's about Sally Face?
I know this doesn't count, but Fortnite has some pretty cool Creative 2.0 horror maps.
Where the hell is Doki Doki Literature Club?
Bloodstained Curse of the Moon!
Why isn't Pac-Man on this list? Your being relentlessly chased by ghosts the whole game.
The cloud resi games work perfectly well and should be put on here. 2, Village and Biohazard are all great.
Fully leaning into the spooky spirit this year in terms of my gaming schedule; got both Limbo and Inside on Switch (already beaten the former at that!) and also have stuff like Devil May Cry 2, Castlevania and Dead Space (2008) planned for the rest of the month as well! 👻
Shout out to Metroid Dread and Tears of the Kingdom for the EMMI, Gloom Spawn and Like Likes, among others. Nicely tense sequences the first time you meet those evil beasties!
Indie horror-games
Bloodwash
Stay out of the house
If you can play through and beat any of the Outlast games or Alien Isolation then you have nerves of steel!
These games are incredibly creepy, tense, anxiety inducing and flat out scary.
"Deep into that darkness peering. Long I stood there. Wondering. Fearing. Doubting."
Eternal Darkness was so ahead of it's time. Best horror have I ever played. And I don't even like the genre usually.
Also, if you put Dark Souls on the list you might as well put Monster Hunter Rise Sunbreak on the list. It has a vampire dragon.
ok I love the look of Carrion, the monster looks like a Shoggoth which is awesome. Wish more games had non-humanoid monster protagonists - that alone wins me over tbh
No Doki Doki literature club?
Odallus the Dark Call is an excellent Castlevania-like. Great music and pixel art.
No Yomawari, no The Coma, no In Sound Mind. But oh, “Luigi’s Mansion is horror themed.”
There are so many more actual horror games on the Switch. Are you guys even trying here?
@locky-mavo I think the answer to that is pretty clear lol. It should say good Halloween games not horror.
World of Horror? Its just dropped? Has horror in the title? Anyone?
@nintendolife any particular reason why you put the OG Residenr Evil Zombie on the thumbnail?
World of Horror should be added. I’ve been playing that the last week. Won’t be everyone’s cup of tea gameplay wise but it’s steeped in horror funnily enough
Surprised Crow Country didn't make the list. I assume it was considered, and didn't make the list. (I haven't played it myself. So, not judging.)
@WoomyNNYes I agree that Crow Country should be here. I enjoyed it more than Alisa which goes for a similar vibe.
While yet again, not a "horror game" per se, I did start playing The Mummy Demastered, which is an excellent Metroidvania experience, with ugly enemy types you'd expect in a horror themed game. There's patches of soil where zombies and mummies spawn freely while you're there, infected rats and spiders, sarcophagi which open and unleash ghosts that do an invincible rapid dash towards you (you have to avoid them, or break the coffin before it opens), and brains that leap out of jars to bounce all around trying to land on you!
Best of all, it has a unique death mechanic, that provides a Souls-lite experience. You are one of dozens of faceless trained agents of a paranormal crisis response army. If you die, your successor spawns in the last save room you used. You carry all the traversal upgrades found thus far, but your health tanks and the last weapons you were carrying remain with your predecessor's reanimated corpse, and you must find and fight him to get them back! He has a fraction of the health he should have, but he's using whatever weapons and bombs you were carrying, and you have only your basic 99 health - and then your SECOND corpse joins him in the room, if you fail there, too!
@OldManHermit @WoomyNNYes Crow Country was definitely supposed to be on here! It now is.
@Neckcrane I swear World of Horror was on here - either way, it's back now.
@anoyonmus Because it's neat.
How in the heck was World End Syndrome, The House in Fata Morgana, Doki Doki Literature Club and Corpse Factory left off this list?
I've been a fan of some of the games from Puppet Combo. Night at the Gates of Hell, No One Lives Under the Lighthouse and Bloodwash were all fun times.
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