DreadOut
Top Critic Average
Critics Recommend
Critic Reviews for DreadOut
After the first 15 or 20 minutes, Dreadout begins to overstay its welcome. It isn't effective as a fun game to play or as a scary game to experience. It quickly becomes one giant, tedious fetch quest, with very few legitimate scares throughout. With horror games, it is difficult to achieve balance between scares and gameplay, but in the case of Dreadout, neither element is effective, and the game truly feels unfinished as a result, even with the promise of future installments.
Digital happiness push all the right buttons with a game that will make you think and possibly even be a little scared.
Without either a compelling cast or plot, there's little to draw the player into the mundane gameplay.
DreadOut 2 introduces the use of weapons and a bunch of new enemies, but fails to represent a consistent leap forward in the series.
Review in Italian | Read full review
On the one hand I have to commend DreadOut for trying to be more than the no-depth scare factories that so many other indie horror games aspire to. It's a callback to the third-person horror games of the PS1/PS2-era and I appreciate that. On the other hand, every attempt to inject that much-needed depth is met with frustrating design decisions. I wanted it to be over well before the end of its brief, two-hour playtime.
Dreadout 2 keeps its pedigree, but lacks the charm of its predecessors. Tag along on my descent into disbelief and complete dismay.
"Winners don't do drugs," the game tells me as it cycles through its scroll of finite messages for the third time as I inch my way toward the light, the way out of limbo. I can hear Linda growing tired, her breathing laborious. Soon I'll have to slow her to a walk so she doesn't deplete her stamina, the length of which I can only guess at. Mine's just about gone.