I love video games - and ever since the days
of Splatterhouse, I’ve been captivated by
the form.
I also love the works of Howard Phillips Lovecraft
- so what better way to combine those two
things, than in a Lovecraftian inspired video
games list?
Hello horror fans, and welcome back to the
scariest channel on YouTube - Top 5 Scary
Videos.
As per usual, I’ll be your humble horror
host, as we peel back the eternally corrupted
hard drive - and try and figure out what the
hell all of these tentacles are doing here
- and take a look at the Top 5 Scariest Lovecraftian
Inspired Video Games.
Roll the clip.
For the curious amongst you, that clip was
from the Cinematic Trailer of The Sinking
City, which is due to be released on March
21st of the this year - and I kind of wish
it was already out, so it could have made
this list - because it looks absolutely awesome.
But, there’s no point dwelling on what could
have been, right?
It’s interesting - and a lot of you have
raised the same point, over and over again
throughout our Lovecraftian lists - which
is that the realm of Cthulhu and his Old Ones
are often ignored as the inspiration for mainstream
media, and Lovecraft’s work has consistently
sat on the fringes of literature, cinema and
entertainment for the majority of the modern
age.
But, just take a look at World of Warcraft,
one of the most successful video games of
all time - and you’ll find that the majority
of their narrative is a spin on the Old Gods
- albeit C’thun, Yogg-Saron and N’Zoth.
You get the picture.
Kicking off at Number 5 - Sunless Sea
Which is just an incredible game, and a benchmark
for all PC gamers and Steam fans out there
- and also PS4 players too, I guess.
If you’re into that kind of thing.
Sunless Sea is a survival exploration RPG
neatly packaged into a merciless roguelike
- which for the non-gamers amongst you, is
the best kind of hardcore mode you could ever
hope you.
Released on February 6th by Failbetter Games,
the studio behind the awesome browser game,
Fallen London - which, if you’ve got a few
spare weeks of your life, is a highly recommended
MUD-esque experience - Sunless Sea finds the
player exploring the bizarre Lovecraft inspired
world of the Unterzee, a vast underground
ocean brimming with cosmic horrors and cannibalistic
mutineers.
If you can’t tell - Sunless Sea is just
a really great game, and it’s a neat little
pastiche to all things Gothic horror.
Permanent character death, the possibility
to eat your own crew - and the opportunity
to explore a dark, dangerous universe with
nothing but your ship and your wits.
Also, the name Sunless Sea is inspired by
the Samuel Taylor Coleridge poem, Kubla Khan
- which is just all kinds of awesome in itself.
Highly recommended.
Coming in at Number 4 - Shadow of the Comet
And I’m kind of cheating a little bit, because
I’d also put the incredibly similar Prisoner
of Ice, also released by Infogrames, on this
exact same spot - but Shadow of the Comet
probably takes the crown for its originality
and Lovecraftian authenticity.
Released by Infogrames in March 1993, Shadow
of the Comet - which was later repackaged
as Call of Cthulhu: Shadow of the Comet, is
an adventure game directly inspired by Lovecraft’s
The Dunwich Horror, as well as The Shadow
over Innsmouth.
Similarly, Prisoner of Ice is inspired by
At The Mountains of Madness - and focuses
on the same thematics laid out in the original
game.
Shadow of the Comet takes place in the year
1910 - and in typical Lovecraft fashion, focuses
on a young British photographer by the name
of John Parker - who travels to the isolated
New England town of Illsmouth - I guess they
couldn’t get the rights for Innsmouth - to
witness and photograph the passage of Halley’s
Comet, a short-period astral event that is
visible from Earth every 75 to 76 years.
Turns out - the last sighting in 1834 had
some pretty terrible consequences - and John
Parker is about to find out exactly what transpired.
Also, for it’s time, this game has some
of the best voice acting going - and it’s
an equally terrifying graphic adventure into
the works of H.P Lovecraft.
Next up at Number 3 - Call of Cthulhu: Dark
Corners of the Earth
Ah - remember when trailers were literally
made days before launch with just the bare
bones of the games engine?
Those were the days.
Call of Cthulhu: Dark Corners of the Earth
was a seminal release for any early-2000’s
horror fan, and possibly one of the reasons
why you’re even interested in this list.
Released in 2005 for the original Xbox, Dark
Corners of the Earth was developed by British
fledgling studio Headfirst Productions, and
published by Bethesda, of all people.
It was also one of only two video games that
Headfirst actually managed to release, and
one of four Call of Cthulhu games that somehow
didn’t get cancelled.
The odds were pretty much stacked against
them - but 2005 was a trying time to be a
video game developer, especially one that
focuses on the works of Lovecraft.
Nevertheless, Dark Corners of the Earth was
a fantastic sci-fi horror survival game, based
on one of Lovecraft’s most famous published
pieces - The Call of Cthulhu.
On that basis as well, it is also a reimagining
of the 1936 novella, The Shadow over Innsmouth,
and follows the story of Jack Walters - a
mentally unstable private detective, tasked
with figuring out what the hell is going on
over in the strange, mysterious town of Innsmouth.
Spoilers: Fish Men.
Most people would stick the Alone in the Dark
franchise on this list - but if I’m being
honest, I’d always root for the underdog
- and Dark Corners of the Earth was exactly
that.
But, in my opinion - it’s one of the truest
interpretations of the Cthulhu Mythos ever
made.
Swinging in at Number 2 - The Last Door
Which, despite being wholeheartedly released
as a mobile game - it’s staggering how authentically
chilling and true to cosmic horror The Last
Door actually is - and it’s one of the most
atmospheric horror indie titles going.
True to the narrative form, The Last Door
is a point and click adventure game that was
released episodically between 2013 and 2016,
spanning over eight episodes of a strange,
mysterious psychological thriller.
First released by The Game Kitchen in March
2013, the studio developed a small, but passionate
community that augmented the direction that
the story took.
The game itself was heavily inspired by Lovecraft,
as well as Edgar Allan Poe, and the plot focuses
on four childhood friends who attempt to explore
an encroaching supernatural territory known
only as the Veil.
For the most part, the player takes control
of Jeremiah Devitt, as he meanders his way
through dark forces, the occult - and childhood
pacts that bore witness to the machinations
of an ancient world.
For an indie game, and on top of that - an
8-bit inspired pixel-art indie game, it’s
testament to The Game Kitchen’s love for
cosmic horror that makes The Last Door such
a horrifying pleasure to play, and although
it’s never explicitly stated - Lovecraft
is in the bones of this game.
Great stuff.
And finally, at our Number 1 spot - Eternal
Darkness
Which perhaps IS the truest interpretation
of Lovecraft’s work ever made, although
it never truly gives that recognition.
I am also DEAD.
Queue trance music.
What a great year 2002 was.
And what a great game Eternal Darkness: Sanity’s
Requiem still is.
Released in 2002 by Silicon Knights and published
by Nintendo themselves, Eternal Darkness is
an action-adventure game that legit has the
scope of an entire trilogy’s worth of novels.
Originally planned to be released on the N64
- the studio switched it up and plugged it
for the GameCube, which may I add is one of
the finest consoles of all time - and I’m
still hanging on to mine in the hope that
the planet will finally realise their worth.
Eternal Darkness is also one of the first
modern games to introduce a sanity effect,
as the player hurtles deeper and deeper into
history and realises the bleak futility of
humanity.
The storyline itself spans between 26 BC to
the year 2000 AD - and focuses on the lineage
of the Roivas Family, as they tentatively
meander their way across the globe and the
ages - Ancient Persia, Cambodia, France, turn
of the millenium USA - and of course, an ancient
underground city that has been hiding underneath
our noses the whole time.
The voice acting is insane, mechanically it’s
a pleasure to play - and the scope of the
narrative is a horror fans ideal rainy day
all day gaming marathon.
What a great game.
Well - there we have it horror fans, my picks
for the Top 5 Scariest Lovecraftian Inspired
Video Games - why don’t you let us know
your thoughts in the comment section down
below.
Before we depart, let’s read out some of
your more creative comments from over the
past few days.
Liesl Zehner says -- Jack, you and Lucy need
to do a video together.
That would make a great video.
-- Well Liesl, I’m not sure if you saw - but
Lucy and I tried to do a video together, and
she ended up stabbing me with a fork.
Nah, but I’m just kidding - I bounced back,
we’ll make sure to hook up a collaboration.
Bmore Queeze says -- I love the witch in the
background need another creature though.
-- Well, sounds good to me Bmore, Agatha the
Witch could probably use a holiday somewhere
nice.
What would you like to see?
A dragon?
A hippogriff?
A cosmic horror?
Let us know, and I’ll see what we can do.
Well - cheers for sticking around all the
way until the end horror fans, always a pleasure
- never a chore.
If you were a fan of this video, make sure
to hit that thumbs up button - as well as
that subscribe bell - and we’ll be seeing
you in the next one.
As always, I’ve been your horror host Jack
Finch - you’ve been watching Top 5 Scary
Videos - and until next time, you take it
easy.
