The best horror games on PC 2023

What are the best horror games on PC? Scary games tend to turn traditional action concepts on their heads and force you to run and hide from your enemies. They leave you feeling vulnerable rather than empowered, and more than most, they are the gaming experiences that haunt you long after you play.

Of course, there is a lot more to the best horror games than jump scares and gore, too. So while we have included a few obvious picks like Outlast and Amnesia, you can also expect to find games that use different tactics to raise your heartbeat and get your palms sweating, whether that’s atmosphere and careful pacing, or unpredictable multiplayer antics like you’ll find in Phasmophobia.

Remember, as Roosevelt once said, “we have nothing to fear but that bit in FEAR where you’re going up a ladder and Alma suddenly pops out and you are all like argh!” Wise words indeed.

The best horror games are:

The best horror games - Scorn

Scorn

Scorn’s grim aesthetic of mutilated body parts and fleshy, dingy corridors make this one of the best horror games we’ve played this year. Though it lacks in jumpscares, it more than makes up for in gory goodness and it’s easy to see the inspiration of H.R. Giger and Zdzisław Beksiński work in Scorn’s skeletal structures, blood-veined flooring, and mechanisms made of appendages.

Scorn uses gore to create moments of unease instead of shock, as you move through a non-linear path solving puzzles in almost near silence (other than the odd squelch). There are plenty of abominations to fight (or hide from) along the way, but like a quiet scream, Scorn becomes increasingly more unhinged as you start to unearth the secrets to its isolated world.

The best horror games - The Devil in Me

The Devil in Me

The Devil In Me is the next game in the Dark Pictures Anthology, a series of standalone narrative, and mainly cinematic horror games that rely on successful quick time events to get all the five characters out alive. It can be played alone on a cold, dark night with the curtains drawn, or so you don’t spook yourself out too much, with friends online or local co-op.

This time a group of journalists receive a mysterious call inviting them to a replica of a serial killer’s home dubbed Murder Castle, a hotel where our journalists can spend the night, what could go wrong? It turns out, a lot. As our guests settle in for some r&r, things quickly take a turn for the worst, and now they must survive the night, evading deadly traps and making horrifying choices along the way. It’s easy to trip up by mis-pressing, but even one bad decision could change the fate of our characters, though if you want to avoid killing anyone, our guide on how to save everyone in The Devil In Me has you covered.

Best horror games: investigating a ghost house in Phasmophobia

Phasmophobia

Phasmophobia has climbed rapidly in popularity since its Early Access release, growing beyond a cult following and showing no signs of slowing down, so what makes it so good?

Although Phasmophobia is primarily a horror game, you could look at it as a co-op detective game as you and up to three other investigators explore a haunted location in an effort to deduce what type of ghost is spooking out the premises before reporting back. It requires teamwork, your best detective hat, and steady nerves to navigate the dark, tight corridors and eerily quiet rooms.

Using equipment, such as ouija boards, a spirit box, a crucifix, and smudge sticks – you and your team need to investigate the haunting and complete tasks such as taking a picture of dirty water, or asking the ghost questions. Be careful, though, all your prying will likely upset the ghost, and you don’t want to be around when it starts hunting.

Best horror games: Running away from the killer in Dead by Daylight

Dead by Daylight

Asymmetric multiplayer horror games don’t come better than Dead by Daylight. You play as either a lone killer or as one of four human survivors who are desperate to escape the map. The survivors can’t do much to fight back, but by working as a team they can misdirect, bait, and frustrate the killer while preparing for their escape. It’s a delightfully simple format that plays host to some of the best scares in gaming, and because it’s all player-driven you can never really predict what’s around the corner.

But Dead by Daylight’s real strength is in its constantly expanding lineup of playable killers. Developer Behaviour Interactive has added almost every horror icon you can think of to its roster, from classic slashers like Ghostface and The Shape, to gaming’s most feared, including Resident Evil’s Nemesis and Silent Hill’s Pyramid Head. Each of them boasts a unique set of abilities that reflects their style of murder and malice, and it’s up to survivors to adapt to whichever killer they’re being stalked by. Make sure you grab the latest, working DBD codes. You can check out or Dead by Daylight killers tier list for pointers on who to pick.

Best horror games: trudging through a frozen, drak tunnel in Metro Exodus

Metro Exodus

Metro Exodus is a number of games packed into one inviting post-apocalyptic slice of Russia: it’s a story-focused family drama as much as it is a Wolfenstein-esque, heavy metal-scored FPS. However, there are plenty of spine-tingling horror game sequences creeping en route to the climactic Metro Exodus ending.

4A Games’ irradiated outing allows you to choose whether you want Artyom’s adventure to be a guns-blazing assault or a stealthy affair shrouded in darkness thanks to the game’s day/night mechanic. But, if you choose to sleep through the daylight hours to creep up on your opponents in pitch darkness, then expect a much scarier experience. Human enemies might be on the back foot, but the chill of a howling Watchmen or the charge of a Humanimal is excruciatingly unsettling.

Yet, as we pointed out in our Metro Exodus PC review, this is a game that is at its most terrifying when it changes the rules. Early stages of the game teach you to extinguish light and master the shadows. Then, in the spider-infested bunkers beneath the Caspian Sea, it becomes your weapon. Your arachnid foes are fatally vulnerable to light, so they skulk about in any dimly-lit crevice they can find. As their disgusting, hairy legs scrabble madly against the walls, it becomes apparent that, in Metro Exodus, you can never let your guard down.

Best horror games: a terrifying old lady holds a skull and laughs in Resident Evil Village

Resident Evil Village

It never gets any easier for Resident Evil Village’s main protagonist, Ethan Winters. We first meet Ethan in Resident Evil 7, when his long lost wife mysteriously makes contact, and he sets out to find her, leading him to a creepy bayou cabin and a nasty run-in with the unsavoury residents, the Baker family. Luckily, Chris Redfield swoops in to save Ethan, and his life regains some normality, if not for long. Ethan’s world is once again turned upside down in Resident Evil 8. This time he’s stuck in an isolated village inhabited by monsters and feral villagers. Resident Evil Village may be remembered for its alluring antagonist, the tall lady, but this first-person survival game soon lets loose the scares.

Resident Evil has a long, storied history of good and bad games, with Resident Evil 6 being a low point in the series. This game is up in the higher echelons, as seen in our Resident Evil Village review. It’s a tense adventure where you need to have your wits about you to survive hordes of werewolf-like creatures, undead thralls, and other horrifying monsters. Even the tall lady has long, sharp claws capable of slicing limbs off. If you can’t stomach body horror and dismemberment, this may not be the right Resident Evil game for you.

It also has perhaps the scariest moment in the series to date; we certainly won’t spoil it for you here. We suggest that when you enter that house, you should play with the lights on, unless you are feeling a little braver than usual.

Best horror games: a fleshy creature with a camera fused to its skin searches for a man with a shotgun in Evil Within 2

The Evil Within 2

The best horror games keep you up at night. By that metric, The Evil Within 2 screams itself to the top. You will certainly struggle to get to sleep after you have seen a pile of severed bodies skitter across the floor and assemble themselves into the form of a pale, fleshy mass of limbs with several faces – all of them laughing – and a buzzsaw in place of a right arm.

The Evil Within 2 is packed with skin-crawling set-pieces like this, each one as inventive as the last. But Tango Gameworks’ impeccable sequel is much more than a list of the best moments in horror games. Slaying bosses and exploring spooky mansions are separated by open-world sections where you never know what is waiting for you: some much-needed shotgun shells or a devious spectre that will continue to haunt you for the remainder of your playthrough.

Underneath the whip-smart enemy and level design, The Evil Within 2 stays true to its survival horror roots, always pitting you against one more crazed enemy than you have bullets for. If that’s still not enough to convince you then take a look at our The Evil Within 2 review.

Best horror games: a close-up of the xenomorph's head from Alien Isolation

Alien: Isolation

Alien: Isolation is a horror game about being stuck on a space station with a (spoiler) big scary alien, which, thanks to some devious AI and level design, is more terrifying than it ever has any right to be. As we discovered while writing our Alien: Isolation review, this horror game is effectively a first-person hiding simulator – your monstrous stalker can’t be beaten, shot, or bashed into submission.

The best horror games make you feel utterly powerless, and in Alien: Isolation it is your wits, your knack for crawling under desks and into lockers, and a variety of distractions that will save you from the hulking, Gigerian horror. A deadly creature who can appear at any moment, unscripted, and without warning: what more could you ask for from a horror game antagonist?

Best horror games: a melee fight in Condemned: Criminal Origins

Condemned: Criminal Origins

Like your horror games unflinchingly violent and heart-grippingly tense? Monolith’s Condemned: Criminal Origins is an accomplished and effortless first-person frightener worth seeking out despite its decade-old graphics.

Here is a homeless-person-fighting simulator in which you play the role of nocturnal crime scene investigator and human punching bag Ethan Thomas. Most remarkable for its lack of guns, Condemned: Criminal Origins is proper flashlight horror, with terrifying, unwashed men leaping out at you from around corners and out of shadows. Coming out of a brawl alive means carefully timing your punches and patiently blocking your opponent’s attacks, and in encounters with multiple enemies your best option is often to run away.

It’s unconventional as police games go, but the horror games genre could do with a little more Condemned: Criminal Origins in their bloodstream.

Best horror games: searching a murder scene in top-down sepia-tinged Darkwood

Darkwood

Sound does not get enough credit in horror games, and if you ever need a reminder of how powerful a simple scratching noise or a distant knock can be, seek out one of the best indie games to delve into the horror genre, Darkwood. This is a top-down horror game about a mysterious man cooking mushrooms in a house right in the middle of a plague-infested forest.

When it is light outside you are free to roam the festering woods, fighting off rabid dogs, collecting resources, and trying to figure out who you are and how you ended up here. By night, however, your only option is to get back to your house and wait for the horrors of the night to pass you by. You can load up your generator with fuel to ward off enemies, barricade the windows to hide yourself, and set traps as a last line of defence – but they are coming for you, no matter how well you have prepared.

Darkwood’s ability to seep into your pores and haunt you without showing you as much as a limb is uncanny. Rustling sounds, inhuman shrieks, and creaky doors had us smashing the Esc key and walking away from the desktop time and time again. Don’t let the top-down perspective fool you, this is one of the best horror games out there.

Best horror games: using the Black Ops Psionic Amplifier to take down undead in System Shock 2

System Shock 2

System Shock 2 kicked a particular flavour of first-person survival horror games into gear. It boasts an open-ended structure, with an endless maze of decks and quarters that promote exploration and discovery. It is a lot like being stuck in a haunted John Lewis, except with psychic death monkeys.

The faster-than-light Von Braun is a persistent world that appears to exist and unfold even while your back is turned – building a heightened sense of place aboard the scarcely populated starship.

But it is corrupted artificial intelligence SHODAN who makes System Shock 2 one of the greatest horror games to have ever graced our fair platform. Right up there with HAL 9000 in the soothingly voiced yet subtly evil computer stakes, she torments and tricks you endlessly, transforming an already terrifying survival RPG into an isolationist horror classic. Few space games match System Shock 2’s sense of isolation.

Best horror games: avoiding the attacks of the servant grunt in Amnesia: The Dark Descent

Amnesia: The Dark Descent

Nightmares aren’t much like horror games; they don’t tend to have rules that make sense. But Amnesia: The Dark Descent is genuinely nightmarish. This is a horror game in which monsters can get at you no matter what, in which sneaking and hiding from these creatures is your only means of self-defence, and in which simply looking at the monsters can drive you insane.

You almost literally curl up into a ball and shut your eyes when Amnesia: The Dark Descent’s monsters are in the room, using audio cues to guess when they have left. Few horror games are as unnerving as Amnesia: The Dark Descent, which sticks by the golden rule of horror: fear of the unknown is the most powerful fear of all.

There is a sequel, Amnesia: A Machine for Pigs, which is just as psychologically arresting. But we wouldn’t recommend mainlining them one after the other – just like Amnesia’s main character, you need to manage your sanity.

Best horror games: a surgeon standing over the player holding a bonesaw

Outlast

Employing the ‘found footage’ style of contemporary horror cinema, Outlast is a first-person exploration game set inside an abandoned psychiatric hospital. Like all abandoned psychiatric hospitals in horror games, this one is populated by a cast of deranged patients and cruel staff, whom you must avoid in order to survive with all of your guts still inside your body. These tropes might be well and truly covered in cinema, but horror games can make the most out of these clichés, and Outlast is the proof.

In order to find your way around Outlast’s dark corridors you must cautiously peer through your camcorder’s green-tinged infrared mode. This gives Outlast a distinctly eerie visual identity, while leaving you feeling vulnerable to baddies creeping up behind you. Your camera’s batteries only last a few minutes, so it is a small mercy that the hospital you are exploring is full of batteries that fit the exact make and model of your camera. Phew.

Best horror games: engineer Isaac Clarke shooting at zombie-like enemies in Dead Space

Dead Space

Like the horror game adaptation of Event Horizon that never was, Dead Space is the story of a fun cabal of ne’er-do-well cultists who bring a deep space mining ship to its flickering, malfunctioning knees.

You are a mechanic armed with a laser cutter capable of strategically dismembering the legions of already malformed alien creatures who now infest the ship, but despite your powerful weaponry, you are never close to being at ease.

Like all the best horror games, Dead Space’s brand of horror is disturbing and often lashes out at your psyche, subtly mixing violence and paranoia to create an atmospheric and unrelentingly bleak miasma of despair. All aboard a classic haunted house spaceship with dark corridors and slightly too many corners for spooky things to hide behind.

Best horror games: a retro horror game interface in Stories Untold

Stories Untold

Stories Untold is a fiendishly imaginative package of four small horror experiences, each one told using a different piece of retro tech as the main vehicle for its twisted tales. The opening episode plonks you in front of a chunky old CRT monitor and playing a horror text adventure called The House Abandon. It’s not long before the environment around you begins to mirror that of the story you’re reading as lights begin to flicker, mysterious thuds go unchecked, and imagined noises keep you pinned to the screen in anticipation of a jump-scare that never comes. This methodical pace sets Stories Untold apart from most other horror games in that it’s four episodes care more about mood and atmosphere than cheap thrills.

The spooky stories also span a range of genres and mediums, from a menacing thriller that’s revealed via the process of decoding radio transmissions, to an elaborate sci-fi yarn that sees you carrying out an experiment on a mysterious artifact using a host of machines and contraptions. And while each episode feels separate, they’re tied together in subtle ways and the final act delivers a twist so punchy it would leave M. Knight Shyamalan reeling.

Also from the Stories Untold studio is the horror game Observation, a sci-fi thriller where you assume the role of an AI trying to save a space station in crisis.

Best horror games: Using a lantern to explore a level in Little Nightmares

Little Nightmares

Although Little Nightmares is on its second outing, it’s still worth picking up the first game in the series – it not only sets the scene for a climactic showdown against The Thin Man in the sequel, but it is perhaps even more terrifying. Set in the claustrophobic corridors of The Maw, you play as Six, a small child trying to flee the horrors of the remote vessel, a place steeped in mystery and malevolence.

You’ll need to solve puzzles in order to move through a treacherous maze of rooms and corridors, avoiding the inhabitants that dwell throughout. The grotesque Twin Chefs are after you with their sharp butcher knives, and The Janitor’s long arms wind through the air vents after you as you desperately try to escape. It may be a relatively short game, but Little Nightmares manages to ramp up the tension in a grim, unsettling world, while creating a harrowing storyline and taking us on a ghastly journey that ends in an epic finale.

Best horror games: exploring an abstract world where bodies are floating through space in Inside

Inside

Similar to Little Nightmares, our protagonist must escape a dark world, where he is hunted and alone, moving through deadly obstacles and avoiding detection. Using a mind control helmet, he can control the hapless, unwitting crowds of people found huddled throughout, to help him move objects and solve puzzles. You’ll also probably die a lot, and like its predecessor Limbo, all the ways you can die are graphic and merciless before the screen fades to black.

Inside’s art style uses monochromatic backdrops and sporadic flashes of colour to create a truly unsettling experience, along with the sparing use of sound and ambient lighting – this sinister, narrative-driven platform game is a horrifyingly haunting ride.

Best horror games: searching through a spooky cave while talking to a friend in Oxenfree

Oxenfree

The story begins – like most cabin in the woods style horrors – when an unsuspecting group of friends journey to a remote island to party, but once they step off the ferry onto an island plagued by forgotten horrors, this party takes a sinister turn. You play as Alex, a rebellious teen, who opens a rift to another world, shaping the story by choosing dialogue snippets and making decisions that determine how the game plays out.

It’s a supernatural thriller that switches between a paranormal horror and relaxing adventure game, to create a tense, disconcerting atmosphere that carries all the way through to the dramatic finale. Oxenfree manages to genre bend into something magical, beautiful, and utterly terrifying.

Best horror games: being attacked by a hellish creature in Doom 3

Doom 3

Doom 3 is almost as old to us now as the original Doom was when Doom 3 came out, but as is the case for all of the best horror games, all that matters is how scary it is, and Doom 3 is still scary as balls.

As traditional a shooter as they come, the focus here is on a rapidly escalating armoury of weapons with which to slaughter an army of hell demons, upside-down baby-face spiders, and weird alien-bears. The id Tech 4 engine was a marvel of its era, bringing an unfathomable level of detail to what had previously been an array of flat brown sprites.

More than a decade on, the precise timing of Doom 3’s jump scares and pop-up monsters still feels borderline cruel – and its selection of nightmarish enemies perfect horror games fodder.

Best horror games in 2022: a group of lost teenagers from The Quarry

The Quarry

PS4 exclusive Until Dawn was a surprise hit back in 2015, telling a ‘cabin in the woods’ style teen horror by letting you make all the tricky decisions. Creators Supermassive Games return to a remote woodland setting with the latest game in the Dark Pictures Anthology, The Quarry, which tells the story of a group of teen counsellors on their last night at camp.

The group settle in for a night of partying, only to find themselves targeted by the blood-thirsty villagers and something else lurking in the woods. The aim is simple: get all the characters out alive. So if you’re always the one calling out stupid decisions characters make in horror movies, now you can see how far your decision-making would get you. Check out all The Quarry cast for all the playable characters, as well as how to get the best The Quarry endings and save everyone.

That’s all from us, the very best horror games available on PC. If you’re in need of a little R&R why not check out the best card games or building games on PC? It’s OK, you can come out from behind whatever piece of furniture you’ve been cowering behind, that really is everything – we’re not going to throw a cheap jump scare into the credits or anything like that.

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