Tags / horror

"horror"

68 BuzzVerdicts across Movies (21), TV Shows (5), PC Games (28), Books (6), Board Games (8)

Psycho

4.8

1960 · Alfred Hitchcock · 109 min · Horror / Thriller

Alfred Hitchcock made Psycho on a tight budget with a television crew, black-and-white film stock, and a willingness to break every rule Hollywood held sacred. The result changed horror filmmaking permanently. Anthony Perkins created a villain so layered and unsettling that Norman Bates became the template for an entire subgenre, and Bernard Herrmann's string score turned a low-budget thriller into something that burrows under your skin and stays there. One clunky exposition scene near the end can't undo what the rest of the film accomplishes. More than sixty years later, this remains one of the most influential and effective thrillers ever made.

The Silence of the Lambs

4.8

1991 · Jonathan Demme · 119 min · Thriller / Horror

One of very few films to sweep the five major Academy Awards, and it earned every one of them. Anthony Hopkins and Jodie Foster deliver two of the most iconic performances in film history, held together by direction that turns conversations into the most gripping scenes you'll watch all year. Its influence on every psychological thriller that followed is impossible to overstate, and while the Buffalo Bill portrayal carries a real cost that deserves honest acknowledgment, the craft on display here remains staggering. More than thirty years on, it still gets under your skin.

Alien

4.7

1979 · Ridley Scott · 117 min · Sci-Fi / Horror

Alien turned a simple creature feature into something that still gets under your skin almost five decades later. Ridley Scott understood that what you can't see is scarier than what you can, and he built an entire film around that principle. The Nostromo feels like a real place, the crew feels like real people doing a lousy job in deep space, and the thing hunting them remains one of the most unsettling creatures ever put on screen. Pacing will test the patience of anyone expecting constant action, and the supporting cast gets more function than personality. Those are real limitations, but they barely register against a film this effective at doing exactly what it set out to do.

Get Out

4.7

2017 · Jordan Peele · 104 min · Horror / Thriller

Get Out turned a $4.5 million budget into a cultural event, an Oscar-winning screenplay, and one of the most talked-about horror films in years. Jordan Peele's debut is sharp, unsettling, and funny in ways that feel completely natural rather than forced. The third act trades some of the earlier precision for more conventional thrills, but by then the film has already done something rare: it made audiences think and squirm in equal measure. This is the kind of movie that gets better on a second viewing, because every scene is doing more than you realized the first time around.

The Thing

4.7

1982 · John Carpenter · 109 min · Horror / Sci-Fi

It failed at the box office, got torn apart by critics, and then spent the next four decades quietly proving every single one of them wrong. John Carpenter built a paranoia engine disguised as a monster movie, and it still runs flawlessly. Practical creature effects remain a high-water mark for the craft, tension never lets up once it starts building, and that ending still sparks arguments. Thin character writing beyond the lead and a slow first act are real flaws, but they barely dent a film this relentlessly effective. It earned its place among the all-time greats of horror and science fiction the hard way.

The Shining (1980)

4.6

1980 · Stanley Kubrick · 146 min · Horror

Stanley Kubrick turned a haunted hotel story into one of cinema's most unsettling psychological experiences. The Overlook Hotel, realized through meticulous production design and Garrett Brown's pioneering Steadicam work, becomes a character in its own right, a labyrinth of long corridors and impossible geometry that disorients viewers as thoroughly as it does Jack Torrance. Nicholson's performance is enormous, and whether that scale is a strength or a weakness depends on what kind of horror you respond to. Shelley Duvall's Wendy, controversial at the time, has been reappraised as a raw portrait of domestic terror. The film divided audiences on release and still does, but the images it plants in your head, the twins, the elevator, Room 237, never leave.

The Fly

4.5

1986 · David Cronenberg · 95 min · Horror / Sci-Fi

David Cronenberg took a 1950s creature feature premise and turned it into one of the most emotionally devastating horror films ever made. Jeff Goldblum gives a career-defining performance as a brilliant man slowly losing everything that makes him human, and Geena Davis matches him beat for beat as the person forced to watch it happen. The practical effects still shock, but the film's real power comes from making you care deeply about someone before destroying them in front of you. A handful of pacing issues in the midsection and some underwritten supporting characters are minor complaints against a film that operates as both top-tier body horror and a genuine tragedy. This is the rare remake that completely eclipses its source material.

Interview with the Vampire

4.5

2022 · 3 Seasons · AMC · Horror / Drama

AMC's Interview with the Vampire reinvents Anne Rice's novel with a boldness that honors the source material while making it entirely its own, anchored by Jacob Anderson and Sam Reid's extraordinary performances as Louis and Lestat. The show explores race, identity, and the horror of eternal life through a gothic lens that's both lavish and emotionally devastating. The unreliable narrator framework adds layers of complexity that reward attentive viewing, though the timeline shifts can occasionally feel disorienting.

Inscryption

4.5

2021 · Card Game / Horror · PC / Steam

Inscryption is one of the most original games released in the last decade, a card game that refuses to stay a card game and keeps pulling the rug out from under you in ways that are impossible to predict. Its first act is as good as deckbuilders get, its meta-narrative adds layers that reward players who lean into the mystery, and the whole package won a shelf full of awards for very good reasons. The later acts don't hit as hard as the opening, and that inconsistency keeps it from perfection. But a game this ambitious and this willing to surprise deserves to be experienced with as little foreknowledge as possible.

Resident Evil 4 Remake

4.5

2023 · Survival Horror · PC / Steam

Resident Evil 4 Remake takes one of the most beloved games ever made and somehow makes it feel both faithful and fresh. Capcom rebuilt the whole thing from scratch, modernized the controls and combat, added a layer of survival tension the original lacked, and did it all without losing the spirit that made the 2005 game a classic. The island section remains the weakest stretch, and some PC players have dealt with DRM-related frustrations, but the core experience is outstanding. This is how you remake a legend.

The Exorcist

4.5

1973 · William Friedkin · 122 min · Horror

The Exorcist set the template for serious horror filmmaking and more than fifty years later, nothing has fully displaced it from that position. William Friedkin built something that functions as both a deeply unsettling horror film and a thoughtful exploration of faith under pressure. Modern audiences may not find it as terrifying as the people who lined up around the block in 1973, but the craft, the performances, and the willingness to treat its subject matter with intelligence rather than exploitation continue to set it apart. It's slower and more demanding than most horror films that followed it, and that's a feature, not a flaw.

The Shining

4.5

1980 · Stanley Kubrick · 144 min · Horror / Thriller

Stanley Kubrick's The Shining abandoned much of what made Stephen King's novel work and replaced it with something entirely its own. The result is a horror film built on atmosphere, geometry, and creeping psychological unease rather than conventional scares. Jack Nicholson's performance remains one of the most debated in the genre, and the Overlook Hotel itself has become as iconic as any character in horror cinema. The pacing will lose some viewers, and King fans have legitimate reasons to feel the adaptation missed the point of the source material. None of that changes the fact that this film has burrowed deeper into popular culture than almost any horror movie ever made, and forty-five years of obsessive rewatching and theorizing suggest it earned that place.

Misery

4.4

1987 · Stephen King · 370 pages · Horror

Stephen King's leanest, meanest novel strips away the supernatural and delivers pure psychological horror. A famous novelist trapped in the home of his self-proclaimed number one fan is a premise so tight and so terrifying that it barely needs embellishment, and King barely provides any. Annie Wilkes is one of fiction's most frightening creations, Paul Sheldon's desperation is palpable on every page, and the novel doubles as King's sharpest commentary on the relationship between writers and their audiences. At 370 pages, it's King at his most disciplined, and the result is a book that grabs you on the first page and doesn't let go until the last.

The Shining

4.4

1977 · Stephen King · 447 pages · Horror

Stephen King's 1977 novel about a family trapped in a haunted hotel remains one of horror fiction's defining works. The Overlook Hotel is one of the most fully realized settings in the genre, Jack Torrance's descent is both terrifying and heartbreaking, and young Danny's psychic abilities give the story an emotional core that pure horror alone couldn't provide. King understood that the scariest thing in this book isn't the ghosts. It's a father losing his battle against his own worst impulses. Some readers find the pacing slow in the early chapters, and King's prose occasionally over-explains, but when the Overlook finally closes its grip, few horror novels can match the experience.

The Terminator

4.3

1984 · James Cameron · 107 min · Sci-Fi / Action

The Terminator is a lean, relentless piece of genre filmmaking that proved James Cameron could do more with less than almost anyone in Hollywood. Built on a modest budget with a simple premise, it generates more tension and atmosphere than most films manage with ten times the resources. Arnold Schwarzenegger found the role he was born to play, the pursuit never lets up, and the horror elements give it a bite that pure action films lack. Some effects show their age and the romance moves fast, but the efficiency of the storytelling makes those feel like minor concessions. Four decades in, it still works as both a chase thriller and a horror film, and that combination hasn't lost a step.

Dead Space (Remake)

4.3

2023 · Survival Horror · PC / Steam

Dead Space (Remake) is one of the strongest horror remakes in gaming, rebuilding the original from the ground up with stunning visual fidelity, an overhauled dismemberment system, and seamless level design that never breaks tension with loading screens. PC performance issues at launch and some divisive design changes keep it from perfection, but for survival horror fans this is the definitive way to experience the USG Ishimura.

Half-Life

4.3

1998 · First-Person Shooter · PC / Steam

Half-Life proved in 1998 that first-person shooters could tell stories through gameplay rather than cutscenes, and that proof changed the entire genre. The seamless scripted sequences, the escalating alien threat, and the way Black Mesa feels like a real place you're fighting through rather than a series of arenas remain impressive decades later. Some sections drag, the platforming has always been divisive, and the final chapters on Xen test patience more than skill. But the journey from the test chamber to the G-Man's offer is one of gaming's most iconic, and the modding community it spawned, including Counter-Strike, reshaped PC gaming entirely.

It

4.3

1986 · Stephen King · 1138 pages · Horror

Stephen King's 1986 epic is one of horror fiction's most ambitious and polarizing novels. At over 1,100 pages, it's a massive commitment that rewards the investment with some of the most vivid childhood friendships in fiction, a villain that has become a cultural icon, and a meditation on memory and fear that goes far deeper than its monster premise suggests. The length is both its greatest strength and its biggest barrier. King's willingness to digress and explore is what gives the book its richness, but it also means that not every reader will make it to the end. Those who do tend to consider it one of the most impactful reading experiences of their lives.

The Stand

4.3

1978 · Stephen King · 1153 pages · Horror

Stephen King's post-apocalyptic epic earns its reputation as one of the most immersive and emotionally powerful novels in horror fiction. A superflu wipes out most of humanity, and the survivors are drawn toward either a benevolent old woman in Boulder or a dark man in Las Vegas. The premise sounds simple, but King fills it with a sprawling cast of unforgettable characters, a meticulous depiction of civilization collapsing, and a moral framework that gives the horror genuine stakes. The length is formidable, the final act disappoints many readers, and King's tendency to wander can try anyone's patience. But the journey to get there is extraordinary, and the characters stay with you for years.

Lethal Company

4.3

2023 · Co-op Horror · PC / Steam

Lethal Company is one of those games that sounds unremarkable on paper and then devours your entire friend group's free time for months. A solo developer built a co-op horror experience that generates better stories than most AAA studios write on purpose. The early access status means rough edges still exist, and playing alone isn't really an option, but those limitations fade fast when you're sprinting back to the ship at 11:58 PM while something with too many legs chases your crew through the rain. If you've got friends who play PC games, this belongs on the short list of things to try together.

Nemesis

4.3

2018 · 1-5 Players · ~90-180 min · Semi-Cooperative Survival Horror

Nemesis is one of the most thematic board game experiences you can put on a table. It generates stories of paranoia, desperate escapes, and sudden betrayal that groups will retell for months. The randomness will frustrate players who want control over their fate, and the rules overhead demands patience from everyone at the table. But for groups that want a game where tension lives in every corridor and trust is always conditional, Nemesis delivers an experience that nothing else in the hobby can match.

Prey (2017)

4.3

2017 · Immersive Sim · PC / Steam

Prey is the kind of game that gets better the more freedom you give it. Arkane Austin built one of the most intricately designed spaces in gaming with Talos I, then filled it with systems that reward curiosity and creative thinking at every turn. Combat won't win any awards, and the backtracking can test your patience with its loading screens. But the core loop of exploring, discovering, and improvising your way through problems puts this among the best immersive sims ever made. It sold poorly and never got the attention it deserved, which is a shame, because there's nothing else quite like it.

SOMA

4.3

2015 · Survival Horror · PC / Steam

SOMA is Frictional Games at the height of their storytelling powers. The underwater setting, the philosophical questions about identity and consciousness, and the relationship between its two lead characters create a narrative that sticks with you long after the credits roll. The monster encounters are the weakest link, and the Safe Mode update essentially acknowledged that by letting players bypass them, but the story they're wrapped around is one of the best the genre has produced. Horror games that make you think this hard about what it means to be human don't come along often. This one is worth the dive.

An American Werewolf in London

4.2

1981 · John Landis · 97 min · Horror / Comedy

An American Werewolf in London rewrote the rules for werewolf movies and then dared you to laugh while it did it. Rick Baker's transformation sequence remains the gold standard for practical effects work in the genre, and the film's willingness to shift between genuine terror and dark comedy gives it a personality that decades of imitators have failed to replicate. The tonal juggling act doesn't always land cleanly, and the third act rushes toward its conclusion faster than the story earns. Those are real weaknesses. But the highs here, the transformation, the decaying Jack, the moors sequence, are so inventive and so committed that they've kept this film in the conversation for over forty years.

Predator

4.2

1987 · John McTiernan · 107 min · Sci-Fi / Action

Predator is one of the smartest action films of the 1980s disguised as one of the dumbest. John McTiernan built a movie that starts as a standard military rescue mission and slowly transforms into a survival horror film, and the genre shift is executed so smoothly that most viewers don't notice it happening until the rules have completely changed. The creature design by Stan Winston holds up beautifully, the jungle setting creates natural claustrophobia despite being outdoors, and the cast brings enough personality to make every loss register. The script is thin by design and some of the early dialogue lands with a thud, but the film knows exactly what it is and delivers on every promise it makes.

Dead Space

4.2

2008 · Survival Horror · PC / Steam

Dead Space remains one of the most effective horror games on PC, built on a foundation of oppressive atmosphere, award-winning sound design, and a dismemberment combat system that still feels distinct. The PC port requires community fixes to reach its potential, and the mission structure leans on repetition, but the experience of creeping through the USG Ishimura holds up remarkably well. If you can tolerate some technical friction, this is survival horror at its most suffocating and rewarding.

The Birds

4.2

1963 · Alfred Hitchcock · 119 min · Horror / Thriller

Alfred Hitchcock's 1963 horror film turned ordinary birds into agents of inexplicable terror, and the refusal to explain why they attack is the film's greatest strength. The slow build from romantic comedy to apocalyptic nightmare is masterfully paced, the attack sequences remain genuinely frightening, and the lack of a traditional score makes the violence feel raw and unmediated. Tippi Hedren's performance anchors the human drama, even when the script doesn't fully support her. The abrupt ending divides audiences, but it's braver than any conventional resolution would have been.

Vampire: The Masquerade - Bloodlines

4.2

2004 · RPG · PC / Steam

Vampire: The Masquerade - Bloodlines is a broken masterpiece that earned its cult following through sheer force of writing, atmosphere, and role-playing depth. The first half of the game, set in Santa Monica, Hollywood, and Downtown Los Angeles, offers some of the finest quest design and character work in RPG history. The Ocean House Hotel is a standout horror sequence. The dialogue is sharp, funny, and dark in equal measure. Then the final act collapses into a combat grind that the game's mechanics can't support, and the bugs that Troika never had time to fix remind you why this studio couldn't survive. The Unofficial Patch is mandatory. But even in its roughest state, Bloodlines has a personality that almost nothing else in gaming can match.

System Shock 2

4.2

1999 · Immersive Sim · PC / Steam

System Shock 2 is one of the most influential PC games ever made, a survival horror immersive sim that pioneered ideas BioShock, Dead Space, and Prey would later build on. SHODAN remains one of gaming's greatest antagonists, the Von Braun is a masterfully designed space to explore, and the blend of RPG progression with resource-scarce horror creates a tension that few games have matched. The interface is dense, the final act doesn't live up to what precedes it, and getting it running well on modern systems can require effort. But the atmosphere and design are so strong that dedicated players still consider it one of the finest horror experiences on PC, and the cooperative multiplayer adds a dimension most people don't expect.

Amnesia: The Dark Descent

4.2

2010 · Survival Horror · PC / Steam

Amnesia: The Dark Descent changed what horror games could be. By stripping away weapons and forcing players to confront threats with nothing but their wits and a dwindling supply of tinderboxes, Frictional Games created an experience that made vulnerability the whole point. The sanity system, the darkness mechanic, and the sound design work together to produce tension that holds up more than fifteen years later. It spawned an entire subgenre of imitators, and most of them still haven't matched it. If you want to understand where modern horror gaming found its voice, start here.

Final Girl

4.1

2021 · 1 Players · 20-60 min · Solo

Final Girl captures the tension and atmosphere of slasher horror in a solo card-and-dice game that plays in under an hour. The modular system of swappable killers, final girls, and locations ensures enormous variety across sessions, and the escalating dread as victims fall and the killer grows stronger creates moments that feel cinematic. Dice dependency can produce cascading failures that feel punishing rather than dramatic, and the randomness of dark power cards occasionally warps difficulty beyond player control. For solo gamers who appreciate horror themes and want a game that delivers real tension in a compact package, Final Girl is one of the best options available.

The Terror

4.1

2018 · 2 Seasons · AMC · Horror Drama

The Terror's first season is a masterclass in historical horror, using the doomed Franklin Expedition as the foundation for a story about leadership, hubris, and the slow unraveling of civilization at the edge of the world. Jared Harris delivers one of the finest performances of the decade as Captain Crozier, and the show's atmosphere of creeping dread is unmatched in recent genre television. Season 2's shift to a completely different setting and cast divided the audience, but the first ten episodes stand on their own as a complete and devastating piece of work.

Tremors

4.0

1990 · Ron Underwood · 96 min · Horror / Comedy

Tremors is a film that has no business being as good as it is. A B-movie creature feature about underground worms attacking a desert town should be disposable entertainment at best, but smart writing, practical effects that still hold up, and a cast with genuine chemistry turned it into something that people have been rewatching for over three decades. The first act takes its time getting started, the premise is inherently ridiculous, and it wears its low budget in spots. None of that diminishes the fact that this is one of the most purely entertaining monster movies ever made, a film that respects its audience enough to let its characters think their way out of problems instead of just running and screaming.

Videodrome

4.0

1983 · David Cronenberg · 87 min · Horror / Sci-Fi

Videodrome is David Cronenberg at his most uncompromising, a film that predicted the way media would reshape human consciousness decades before the rest of the world caught up. James Woods delivers a ferocious lead performance as a man whose reality dissolves around him, and the practical effects remain some of the most disturbing and inventive ever committed to film. The narrative deliberately blurs the line between what's real and what's hallucination until the distinction ceases to matter, which will thrill viewers who want their horror to challenge them and frustrate those who want a story they can follow. It's not Cronenberg's most accessible film. It might be his most important one.

Resident Evil 7: Biohazard

4.0

2017 · Survival Horror · PC / Steam

Resident Evil 7 is a triumphant return to survival horror for a franchise that had lost its way, delivering a first-person experience that's both deeply unsettling and mechanically satisfying. The Baker family estate is one of gaming's great horror locations, and the opening hours rank among the best the series has produced. A weaker final act that trades atmosphere for action and exposition prevents it from reaching the heights of the genre's best, but as a statement of intent and a reinvention of a beloved series, it succeeds on almost every level that matters.

Devotion

4.0

2019 · Psychological Horror · PC

Devotion is a deeply personal horror game that uses a 1980s Taiwanese apartment as the stage for a family tragedy steeped in superstition and regret. Red Candle Games crafted one of the most emotionally resonant horror experiences in recent memory, with environmental storytelling so detailed that every object in the apartment tells part of the story. The game is short at roughly three hours, the puzzles are simple, and the lack of real danger reduces tension in the back half. But the narrative payoff is devastating, the cultural specificity enriches every moment, and few horror games have ever made their setting feel this lived-in. It's less about being scared and more about being heartbroken, and that's what makes it unforgettable.

Outlast

4.0

2013 · Survival Horror · PC / Steam

Outlast is one of the defining horror games of the 2010s, built on a simple but devastatingly effective premise: you cannot fight back. The camcorder night vision mechanic creates a unique visual identity and constant resource tension, and the asylum setting delivers dread in waves. The formula wears thin in the final stretch as repetition sets in, but the first two-thirds of Outlast represent some of the most intensely frightening gameplay the genre has produced.

Alien: Isolation

4.0

2014 · Survival Horror · PC / Steam

Alien: Isolation is one of the finest horror games ever made, a masterclass in tension that uses its intelligent Xenomorph AI to create an atmosphere of constant dread. The recreation of the 1979 film's aesthetic is stunning, and the cat-and-mouse gameplay delivers genuine fear in a way few games have matched. Its excessive length holds it back from greatness, with the final third wearing down the tension it spends so long building. But the first fifteen hours remain some of the most effective survival horror in the medium, and for fans of the franchise or the genre, there's nothing else quite like it.

Cthulhu: Death May Die

4.0

2019 · 1-5 Players · ~90-120 min · Cooperative

Cthulhu: Death May Die takes a more action-oriented approach to Lovecraftian board gaming than most of its peers, and the combination of scenario variety, Elder God diversity, and investigator abilities creates a replayability engine that keeps the game fresh across dozens of plays. The dice-chucking combat is satisfying and fast, and the insanity system elegantly ties mechanical power to narrative risk. Cramped map tiles and fiddly damage tracking are real annoyances that the design never fully solves. But for groups that want their cosmic horror with more punching and less puzzle-solving, this hits the mark.

Dredge

4.0

2023 · Adventure · PC / Steam

Dredge takes two things that shouldn't work together, fishing simulation and cosmic horror, and makes them feel inseparable. The atmosphere is exceptional, the inventory puzzle of fitting catches into your hull is oddly satisfying, and the sense of dread that builds as night falls gives routine fishing trips real tension. It runs short and the late game doesn't quite match the mystery of the opening hours, but what's here is a tightly crafted experience that does something no other game is doing.

Frankenstein

4.0

1818 · Mary Shelley · 352 pages · Gothic Fiction

Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein at eighteen and accidentally invented science fiction. The novel that most people think they know from movies and pop culture is far stranger, sadder, and more philosophically ambitious than any adaptation has captured. Victor Frankenstein is not a cackling mad scientist. His creature is not a mindless monster. The real horror lives in the space between creator and creation, in the responsibilities we owe to the things we bring into the world. It's a short book that asks enormous questions, and over two hundred years later, those questions have only gotten more relevant.

Hereditary

4.0

2018 · Ari Aster · 127 min · Horror / Drama / Mystery

Hereditary is a deeply unsettling horror film that earns its scares through character and atmosphere rather than cheap tricks. Toni Collette delivers a performance that would be the centerpiece of any prestige drama, and Ari Aster's direction creates a sense of dread so thick it becomes almost physical. The final act's shift into supernatural territory loses some viewers who connected more deeply with the family drama, and the film's pacing demands patience that not all horror audiences are willing to give. But when it works, and for most of its runtime it works extraordinarily well, Hereditary feels like something new in a genre that rarely surprises anymore. It doesn't just scare you. It disturbs you on a level that's hard to shake.

Alan Wake 2

4.0

2023 · Survival Horror · PC / Epic Games Store

Alan Wake 2 is Remedy Entertainment's most ambitious game, and it largely delivers on that ambition. The atmosphere, visual design, and integration of live-action sequences create something that feels unlike anything else in the genre. Saga's investigative gameplay and the Dark Place's shifting reality offer two distinct flavors of horror that complement each other well. But the pacing asks a lot of patience, combat doesn't evolve enough over the runtime, and the PC version's hardware demands limit who can experience it properly. For players who want a horror game that prioritizes mood and narrative above all else, this is one of the most memorable entries in years.

Arkham Horror: The Card Game

4.0

2016 · 1-4 Players · ~60-120 min · Cooperative / Living Card Game

Arkham Horror: The Card Game is one of the most compelling cooperative experiences in tabletop gaming, blending narrative-driven campaigns with meaningful deckbuilding in a way that makes every session feel like it matters. The Lovecraftian atmosphere is thick, the investigator variety is excellent, and the way your decisions carry permanent consequences across a campaign creates genuine emotional investment. The cost of entry is significant and the base set alone feels incomplete, which is a hard pill to swallow. But for players willing to invest in at least one full campaign cycle, this is a game that delivers experiences few others can match.

Phasmophobia

4.0

2020 · Co-op Horror · PC / Steam

Phasmophobia turned a simple premise into one of the most effective co-op horror experiences on PC. The ghost hunting loop is satisfying, the voice recognition adds an interaction layer that nothing else offers, and playing with friends creates the kind of shared stories that keep groups coming back for years. It's still in early access, with rough edges that show, and solo play can't replicate what makes the game special. But for groups looking for something properly scary that also generates constant laughter, Phasmophobia occupies a space in co-op gaming that nobody else has filled.

Resident Evil Village

4.0

2021 · Survival Horror · PC / Steam

Resident Evil Village is a confident, varied horror game that takes big swings with its location design and mostly connects. Castle Dimitrescu and House Beneviento rank among the best sequences Capcom has ever produced, and the expanded combat options give the action a satisfying crunch that Resident Evil 7 lacked. The back half can't sustain the front half's momentum, and the story asks you to care about a narrative that never quite earns it. But as a complete package, Village delivers a 10-12 hour campaign that's consistently entertaining, frequently surprising, and packed with enough variety to keep you guessing about what comes next. Capcom proved they could evolve the modern Resident Evil formula without losing what made it work.

Stranger Things

4.0

2016 · 5 Seasons · Netflix · Sci-Fi / Horror / Drama

Stranger Things built something special in its first season, a story that blended 80s nostalgia with real horror and heart in a way that felt effortless. The young cast was a revelation, the synth score became iconic, and for eight episodes the show fired on every cylinder. Later seasons expanded the scope but lost some of that focus, with bloated runtimes and too many subplots pulling attention away from what made the show click. A divisive final season keeps it from reaching the heights its opening act promised. Still, at its best, this is one of the defining shows of its era, and those early seasons remain as good as anything the streaming age has produced.

Nope

3.8

2022 · Jordan Peele · 131 min · Sci-Fi / Horror

Nope is Jordan Peele's biggest and most visually ambitious film, and also his most uneven. The central creature design is wildly original, the IMAX cinematography is stunning, and Keke Palmer delivers a performance that deserves to launch her into a different tier of stardom. When the film focuses on the Haywood siblings trying to capture evidence of something impossible in the sky above their ranch, it's thrilling and funny and unlike anything else in recent horror. But Peele is juggling too many thematic plates at once, the Gordy subplot never fully connects to the main story, and the pacing lurches between stretches of dead air and bursts of intensity. It's a film with extraordinary individual sequences that doesn't quite cohere into the unified statement Peele seems to be reaching for.

Alien: Romulus

3.8

2024 · Fede Álvarez · 119 min · Sci-Fi / Horror

Alien: Romulus is the franchise getting back to doing what it does best: trapping people in a confined space with something that wants to kill them, then ratcheting the tension until it becomes almost unbearable. Fede Álvarez proved he understands the mechanics of this series, and the practical creature work is some of the best the franchise has produced in decades. The heavy reliance on callbacks and a divisive third-act creature keep it from standing fully on its own, and several characters needed more development to make their fates resonate. But as a return to the horror roots that defined the original film, this delivers the goods.

Fury of Dracula

3.8

2015 · 2-5 Players · 120-180 min · Competitive / Hidden Movement / Deduction

Fury of Dracula is one of the most atmospheric hidden movement games ever made, capturing the cat-and-mouse tension of hunting a vampire across Victorian Europe better than almost any other design. The theme, the gradual build of dread, and the dramatic confrontations when hunters finally corner the Count produce moments that few board games can match. Pacing issues and a lengthy playtime mean those moments are separated by stretches where not much happens, and the game demands the right group and the right mood to land. But when it works, Fury of Dracula delivers an experience that its many imitators have never quite replicated.

The Evil Within 2

3.8

2017 · Survival Horror / Third-Person Shooter · PC / Steam

The Evil Within 2 is a stronger, more refined game than its predecessor in almost every mechanical sense. Better stealth, better crafting, better exploration, and a more personal story for Sebastian Castellanos. It trades some of the original's relentless horror tension for player freedom and accessibility, and that trade-off defines how you'll feel about it. If you want a polished survival horror experience with room to breathe and explore, this delivers. For those who want something that never stops trying to terrify them, the sequel's open-world ambitions occasionally get in its own way.

BioShock 2

3.8

2010 · First-Person Shooter · PC / Steam

BioShock 2 is the sequel that time has treated better than its launch window did. The combat is a genuine improvement over the original, with the dual-wielding of plasmids and weapons creating a fluidity that the first game never achieved. The father-daughter narrative at its center provides emotional grounding that gives your choices real weight. It doesn't match its predecessor's power of revelation, the shock of discovering Rapture for the first time can't be replicated, and the story plays it safer than fans hoped. But as a shooter set in one of gaming's most iconic locations, with combat that finally lives up to the setting's potential, it deserves the reassessment it has been receiving.

System Shock (Remake)

3.8

2023 · Immersive Sim · PC / Steam

System Shock's remake is a labor of love that brings a 1994 classic into the modern era while keeping its soul intact. Nightdive Studios nailed the atmosphere, modernized the visuals without losing the original's claustrophobic identity, and kept SHODAN as one of gaming's most compelling villains. The trade-off is that the game's maze-like levels and minimal guidance are still here, preserved alongside the good stuff. Players who want that old-school challenge of charting their own path through a hostile space station will find one of the most faithful and well-executed remakes in years. Everyone else should know what they're signing up for.

Mansions of Madness: Second Edition

3.8

2016 · 1-5 Players · 120-180 min · Cooperative / App-Driven Horror

Mansions of Madness: Second Edition delivers some of the most atmospheric first-play experiences in tabletop gaming, using its companion app to generate genuine mystery and dread in ways no cardboard-only game can match. When a new scenario unfolds and you have no idea what lurks behind the next door, it captures the spirit of Lovecraftian horror better than almost anything on the shelf. But the magic fades fast on repeat plays, the base game ships with too few scenarios for its price, and the physical components struggle to justify the premium cost. For groups who want an occasional evening of cooperative horror storytelling and are willing to invest in expansions over time, it remains a compelling and unique experience.

Sons of the Forest

3.7

2024 · Survival Horror · PC / Steam

Sons of the Forest delivers a gorgeous, unsettling forest to survive in and expands on its predecessor in almost every mechanical way. The building is more flexible, the AI companions are surprisingly endearing, and the atmosphere can shift from peaceful to terrifying in seconds. But the story never comes together in a satisfying way, performance issues persist, and the survival and narrative elements feel like they exist in parallel rather than reinforcing each other. It's a better sandbox than it is a horror game, and a better co-op experience than a solo one.

Visage

3.5

2020 · Psychological Horror · PC / Steam

Visage is one of the most terrifying games released in recent years, with an atmosphere and sound design that can make simply standing in a hallway feel unbearable. Its commitment to psychological horror is total, and when it works, nothing else in the genre comes close. But the obscure puzzle design, frustrating inventory system, and wildly uneven chapter quality mean that patience is the price of admission. Players who can tolerate the rough edges will find something truly special underneath.

Event Horizon

3.5

1997 · Paul W.S. Anderson · 96 min · Sci-Fi / Horror

Event Horizon is a haunted house movie that swapped the creaking mansion for a gothic spaceship orbiting Neptune, and the concept alone carries it further than the execution probably should. Sam Neill and Laurence Fishburne bring more gravity to their roles than the script deserves, the production design is wildly inspired, and the film's best moments generate a creeping dread that few sci-fi horror films have matched. A rushed production gutted the pacing, the dialogue is often flat, and the final act collapses into horror cliches that undercut the atmospheric tension the film spent an hour building. The legend of the lost director's cut only adds to the mystique. What's left is a flawed, fascinating film that earned its cult following through sheer visual ambition and an unforgettable central premise.

Prometheus

3.5

2012 · Ridley Scott · 124 min · Sci-Fi / Horror

Prometheus is a film at war with itself. Ridley Scott's return to the universe he created in 1979 delivered some of the most stunning science fiction filmmaking of its decade, anchored by Michael Fassbender's unsettling performance as the android David. The ambition is real, the visuals are extraordinary, and the questions it raises about human origins are deeply compelling. But the script undermines that ambition at nearly every turn with characters who behave like they've never encountered basic danger before. It's a frustrating film precisely because the gap between what it reaches for and what it achieves is so visible.

Outlast 2

3.5

2017 · Survival Horror · PC / Steam

Outlast 2 delivers some of the most oppressive atmosphere in modern horror gaming, with a rural Arizona cult setting that drips with dread from the first frame to the last. The visuals are a significant upgrade over the original, the sound design keeps you permanently on edge, and the opening hours rank among the most terrifying in the genre. But the game leans too heavily on chase sequences that punish trial and error rather than rewarding smart play, the story raises more questions than it answers, and the school flashback segments disrupt pacing without adding enough payoff. It's a flawed follow-up to a modern horror classic, but the atmosphere alone makes it worth experiencing if you can tolerate the frustration.

Cry of Fear

3.5

2012 · Survival Horror · PC / Steam

Cry of Fear is one of the most ambitious horror projects ever built on the Half-Life engine, delivering a psychological horror campaign that takes real mental health themes seriously and wraps them in deeply terrifying enemy design and atmosphere. The sound design alone would put most AAA horror games to shame, and the amount of content packed into a free game is remarkable. But the engine shows its age in combat that feels clunky rather than tense, puzzles that frustrate more than they challenge, and technical issues that interrupt the experience at its most intense moments. It's a flawed, deeply personal creation that punches well above its weight class when it's working and tests your patience when it isn't.

Layers of Fear

3.5

2016 · Psychological Horror · PC / Steam

Layers of Fear turns a Victorian mansion into a shifting, unreliable space that mirrors its protagonist's fractured mind, and the result is one of the more memorable psychological horror experiences on PC. The constantly changing environment keeps you off balance, and the story of an artist consumed by obsession hits harder than most horror game narratives. It's short, light on traditional gameplay, and divisive on whether its scares land, but for players who value atmosphere and storytelling over mechanics, this is a focused and effective piece of horror.

Dracula

3.5

1897 · Bram Stoker · 512 pages · Gothic Horror

Bram Stoker's 1897 novel created the modern vampire and launched an entire genre that shows no signs of slowing down. The book itself is a mixed experience. Its opening section in Castle Dracula is atmospheric horror at its finest, and the epistolary format creates genuine tension when it works. But the middle sags badly, the heroes are bland compared to their villain, and Victorian attitudes toward women date the novel in ways that can be hard to ignore. Dracula endures because its central figure is one of the great creations in horror fiction. The novel around him doesn't always live up to the character it invented.

Betrayal at House on the Hill

3.5

2004 · 3-6 Players · ~60 min · Semi-Cooperative / Exploration

Betrayal at House on the Hill is a board game that trades mechanical precision for raw, unpredictable storytelling, and that tradeoff defines the entire experience. When a haunt fires at the right moment and the table erupts into chaos, it produces memories that more polished games simply can't match. When the dice are cruel and the scenario falls flat, it feels like a waste of an evening. Committing to the ride means accepting both outcomes. For groups that value atmosphere and shared stories over competitive fairness, Betrayal remains one of the most distinctive games in the hobby. Just don't expect it to play fair.

Alien 3

3.2

1992 · David Fincher · 114 min · Sci-Fi / Horror

Alien 3 is the most divisive entry in a franchise built on strong opinions. David Fincher brought a bleak, gothic atmosphere that set it apart from everything that came before, and the prison setting created a vulnerability that neither the original nor its sequel attempted. Sigourney Weaver's performance as a Ripley facing her own mortality gives the film genuine weight, and Charles S. Dutton's Dillon is one of the franchise's most underrated characters. But the decision to kill beloved characters offscreen, inconsistent visual effects, and a troubled production that shows in the final cut keep it from fully realizing its ambitions. The Assembly Cut improves the experience meaningfully, though it can't fix every problem the film carries.