Itâs the most wonderful time of the year! No, not Christmas â itâs October the month of Halloween. There is really no better time to scare yourself silly with videogames â and weâre not talking about the rising price of them.
Horror games are my favourite kind. Seriously, should Magnus Magnusson ever rise from the dead and invite me onto Mastermind, horror games would almost certainly be my specialist subject. And, since thereâs 31 days of this month in which to spook yourself, I thought it would be fitting to provide 31 incredibly chilling horror games for you to delve into â one for each day of this most frightful of months.

There are, of course, a number of games that are dead â pun absolutely intended â certs. Resident Evil (1996), Resident Evil 2 (1998), Resident Evil 3: Nemesis (1999), Resident Evil â Code: Veronicaâ (2000), Resident Evil 4 (2005) â which is perhaps the greatest video game ever made â and, at least for the first few agonisingly claustrophobic hours,Resident Evil 7 (2017). Itâs a curveball, but Iâm going to add Resident Evil Zero (2002), an underappreciated frightfest and a glimmer of hope during an era where Capcom seemed obsessed with getting people to care about light guns. The remakes of Resident Evil 2 (2019) and Resident Evil 3 (2020) also make the cut.
Thatâs already nine games so far, and itâs unlikely any other franchise will dominate this list in such an aggressive manner. There is of course Konamiâs Silent Hill (1999), Silent Hill 2 (2001) â another contender for the greatest game ever â and Silent Hill 3 (2003). I would like, however, to offer a reappraisal of Silent Hill 4: The Room, which took the seriesâ DNA, significantly retooled it, and refreshed the entire franchise in the process.
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If youâve never played it before, you spend 50 per cent of the game in one room, peeking through a crumbling hole in the wall. Itâs some creepy genius, though not as much as PT, the critically acclaimed âplayable teaserâ for the now cancelled Silent Hills. which was supposed to be directed by Metal Gear Solidâ creator Hideo Kojima and filmmaker Guillermo del Toro.
Weâre now up to 14. Letâs throw in Red Barrelsâ Outlast (2013) and its sequel, Outlast II (2017). Theyâre a bit rough around the edges and peddling a dated asylum trope, but undoubtedly effective. Dead Space (2008) and Dead Space 2 (2011) also deserve to be in this list for keeping the survival horror genre alive through some lean years and amplifying the terror that is the vortex of deep space.
But really, when it comes to intergalactic fear, thereâs one game that towers above them all: 2014âs Alien: Isolation, a game that conjured up such creeping dread that up to 90 per cent of people who ever played it are allegedly still hiding in an air vent or under a desk. While weâre exploring space, another oldie but a goodie is System Shock 2 (1999), aka what designer Ken Levine did before Bioshock (2007), which totally goes in this list too.

Thatâs 21 games so far. Sticking with the retro vibe, letâs add Condemned: Criminal Origins (2005), a nasty, disturbing offering from SEGA that would break the internet if it was released today. And, of course, Amnesia: The Dark Descent (2010), because if you can get through what weâll simply describe as âthe water partâ without screaming until your windows shatter, youâre braver than this writer.
Other throwback horror games that deserve a spot on this list include Forbidden Siren 2 (2006) and Fatal Frame II: Crimson Butterfly (2003), two bizarre titles from the golden days of the PS2, a machine that had more than its fair share of horror game highlights. Iâd also like to give some props to Darkwood (2014) too. Itâs not considered a retro game, but it certainly feels like one. Itâs a top down survival horror thatâs extremely unsettling, much like Doki Doki Literature Club! (2017), a visual novel that has to be played in the dark. Under a blanket and away from others.
Weâre down to our last four games. At number 28 is Slender: The Eight Pages (2012), which has seen better days, but few experiences in gaming are as frightening as when you first encounter the gameâs titular antagonist. Letâs also add in Hidetaka Miyazakiâs masterpiece, Bloodborne and a game thatâs unparalleled in its dankness: Dark Souls (2011). Finally, letâs round things out with that wretched eel from Mario 64 (1996), which is, in truth, a moment scarier than anything any horror game can offer. Warning: donât look into its horrible, soulless eyes. And with that, creep yourself out folks.
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