The Dark Pictures Anthology: Directive 8020 Reviews

The Dark Pictures Anthology: Directive 8020 is ranked in the 48th percentile of games scored on OpenCritic.
8 / 10
May 11, 2026

Directive 8020 is a compelling, frequently terrifying, and occasionally flawed piece of interactive horror that confirms Supermassive Games as the undisputed masters of their particular craft. The story is excellent, the atmosphere is exceptional, and the sound design is frankly some of the best work the genre has ever produced. The repetitive stealth mechanics and the stiff character animations can be characterised as weaknesses, and they hold the game back from going even higher on my scale, but they do not come close to undoing what the game gets so right.

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6 / 10.0
May 11, 2026

Even with interesting additions and more realized moment-to-moment gameplay, Directive 8020 can't make up for the overall package's fumbles.

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May 11, 2026

Directive 8020 is simply captivating. With a story that invites players to question the very nature of the protagonists they control—and an alien that can impersonate anyone—the game is an intriguing tale about what awaits mankind beyond the comfort of our home on Earth. Even after the credits roll, there are plenty of secrets left to discover, and it is thanks to the Turning Point system that players can easily explore every branching path and outcome that awaits on the Cassiopeia.

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9 / 10
May 11, 2026

Directive 8020 is Supermassive Games’ most chilling and best horror game yet. The new engine shines with the most beautiful and atmospheric environment yet, with an amazing cast of crew members we desperately try to keep alive. The survival horror stealth sections provide the interaction I’ve been craving from the genre, and the sense of dread as you figure out who to trust never left me. It’s not only one of the best games in its sub-genre, but one of the better horror games in recent memory.

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7 / 10.0
May 11, 2026

Directive 8020 is a tense and replayable slice of sci-fi horror that mostly sticks the landing, even if its overused stealth and uneven cast hold it back

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May 11, 2026

I’m glad to see Supermassive giving itself time to experiment and adapt. Pivotal choices and interactions feel relevant, and reward you for paying attention. There are modes and mechanics here I’d love to see taken forward or even ported back into older entries. But many of those additions don’t quite yet feel finalized, and their inclusion comes at the reduction of other, enjoyable elements. For fans of the Dark Pictures series, the cast and setting make Directive 8020 well worth enlisting with the Cassiopeia. But sadly, it doesn’t quite reach the stellar heights I was hoping for.

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8 / 10.0
May 11, 2026

Directive 8020 is the start of a new season for the Dark Pictures anthology, and it’s's off to a good start. The massive leap from Earth to space effectively gives us a way to experience terror and mostly works. Still, it's often undone by dreadful stealth sections that quickly scuttle the tension due to overreliance on staying quiet. However, for the things I don't enjoy, Supermassive Games delivers a great game with a great sense of tension.

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7.3 / 10.0
May 11, 2026

Directive 8020 manages to bring interesting innovations to the interactive game genre by introducing new choice possibilities, stealth mechanics, and systems that allow players to revisit important campaign decisions. Despite these gameplay evolutions, the title ultimately fails to deliver a truly immersive experience due to a weak, predictable, and largely forgettable narrative throughout the journey.

Review in Portuguese | Read full review

May 11, 2026

The stellar performances from the actors, out-of-this-world graphics, and sci-fi theming are on point. It's just a shame that the game is repetitive, with too many arduous stealth sections. If you can get past some bad pacing issues as well, Directive 8020 is worth the riveting trip it takes you on.

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GAMES.CH
Top Critic
74%
May 11, 2026

"Directive 8020" was both fun and disappointing. On the one hand, we acknowledge the gameplay improvements. The controls, puzzles, and story features have all been consistently refined. The motivation to complete the game on the first playthrough is just as strong as the desire to experiment with deaths and choices. At the same time, however, the story of "Directive 8020" is far too conservative in its conception and execution.

Review in German | Read full review

79 / 100
May 11, 2026

While Directive 8020 exhibits some of the frequent shortcomings of previous Dark Pictures games, it is a largely enjoyable sci-fi, horror jaunt to the other side of the galaxy. With confident direction and surprising twists its a high watermark for the anthology series.

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9.5 / 10.0
May 11, 2026

Directive 8020 is a love letter to the space horror that looks beyond just going bump in the night. The distrust sown across the small team, the dialogue choices, and the interactions all craft a game that feels like it belongs on the shelf alongside titles like Dead Space, Sunshine, Event Horizon, and even The Thing.

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8.5 / 10.0
May 11, 2026

From top to bottom, Directive 8020, even with the minor technical issues I experienced, is SuperMassive's best game yet. The story is solid, and through the use of flashbacks, the player is kept wondering when the results of the actions they took earlier in the game will come to the forefront. This is a well-crafted addition to the Dark Pictures line of games. Speaking of, if you miss the presence of an old friend, make sure you gather all the secrets the Cassiopiea has hidden within her.

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Uagna
Top Critic
8.5 / 10.0
May 11, 2026

Directive 8020 represents a significant leap forward not only for Supermassive Games and the Dark Pictures Anthology, but for horror adventure games in general. The story follows the terrifying events of a catastrophic mission to colonize a new planet. The player has complete freedom to shape the characters' personalities and destinies: the "Turning Points" mechanic allows you to change your choices and rewind the plot at any time, exploring its many twists and turns. The gameplay is more varied and engaging, with a focus on direction and a cinematic experience. The story isn't particularly original, and the stealth sections disrupt the idyll, but overall it's a solid adventure that didn't disappoint.

Review in Italian | Read full review

9.5 / 10.0
May 11, 2026

Directive 8020 is by far one of the best games Supermassive has made, with an engaging story and characters and choices that carry a lot of weight.

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80 / 100
May 11, 2026

Directive 8020 isn’t the revolution some might have hoped for, but it’s the clearest sign that Supermassive needed to pause, breathe, and refocus. The result is an entry that doesn’t reject its past but revisits it with sharper intent: more exploration, less rigid gameplay, branching paths that finally reward replayability, and a technical foundation no longer held back by old‑gen limits. There are still a few rough edges — pacing dips, a couple of weaker sections, uneven audio — yet nothing that undermines the sense of a more mature, self‑aware chapter. If this is the first step of season two, the direction is right: more courage, more space, more willingness to push a format that risked becoming predictable. Not a new beginning, but a new balance — and for a series built on choices and possibilities, perhaps the best choice it could make.

Review in Italian | Read full review

Jesse Norris
Top Critic
7 / 10.0
May 11, 2026

Directive 8020 is a solid sci-fi yarn let down by some early snark-filled writing. The plot is serviceable in showing you some gorgeous locations full of people you may or may not want to save, and a bevy of monsters you’ll get bored hiding from. If you’ve enjoyed the studio’s previous work, then rest assured that Directive 8020 may well be worth checking out.

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74 / 100
May 11, 2026

Directive 8020 successfully blends elements of horror and suspense with a science-fiction atmosphere, offering a cinematic experience where your choices truly feel impactful. However, due to its repetitive gameplay loop, slow-paced narrative, and occasional acting and animation issues, it remains a title that fails to fully realize its potential.

Review in Turkish | Read full review

8.5 / 10.0
May 11, 2026

Directive 8020 is a major step forward for The Dark Pictures Anthology. The story is engaging, the production values are excellent, and the added gameplay mechanics make this the most interactive entry in the series so far. The stealth sections can become a bit repetitive, but they never get in the way of what is still a tense and highly entertaining sci-fi horror survival adventure.

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7.5 / 10.0
May 11, 2026

Directive 8020 may lean into some of the formula of its past brethren, but smart gameplay choices make it a vastly more modern and engaging experience, despite the excessive reuse of faces we've seen throughout the entire anthology.

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