The Nameless City Reviews
The Nameless City isn’t the first, and it won’t be the last, to examine and play around with the works of H.P. Lovecraft.
An adaptation of Lovecraft’s popular short story, The Nameless City focuses on exploration and foreboding atmosphere rather than action, while its mundane-yet-otherworldly visuals create effective tension during the hero’s descent into ruins he shouldn’t descend into. There are a few problems that make it a hard sell, however. Some, like a couple of visual flaws, are minor. Others, like the lack of depth when it comes to the gameplay, are a bit harder to stomach. Its brief runtime also leaves ideas underdeveloped despite occasional moments of genuine cosmic horror.
Bite-sized first-person experience based on H.P. Lovecraft's short novel of the same name
The Nameless City won’t be for everyone. It’s short, strange, and content to let unease do the heavy lifting. But for players who appreciate slow-burn horror and storytelling through atmosphere rather than exposition, this is a haunting little gem. It captures the dread of Lovecraft’s work and translates it into an experience that feels intimate and unsettling from start to finish. A brief but immersive descent into madness — perfectly suited for a dark night, a pair of headphones, and the courage to keep walking forward when every instinct tells you not to.