Itās not a Resident Evil game, not Amnesia, not Slender. Itās 1992 adventure game Alone in the Dark. The original Alone in the Dark
This intro might not scare you, since nothing really happens, but that was exactly why the game was so terrifying. It was so minimal. Just the crunch of your footsteps, the creaking of an old door and the unsettling site of your polygonal avatar traversing a house that was sitting there just to try and kill him (or her, as you could play as one of two characters).
I know, if youāre under the age of 27, youāre probably looking at this and thinking āwhat a janky old piece of crapā. And in many ways, it was. Being a pioneering 3D title meant control of your character was tough, and things like aiming weapons were almost impossible. It also meant the gameās visuals were jarring, like Dire Straits had made an FMV adventure game.
But those rough edges only served, at the time at least, in the gameās favour. If youāre playing an action game and your most common quote is āwhat the f**k just happenedā, thereās probably something wrong with it. But when you say it as often as you do in this game, whether as a result of something unexpected or just weird, it only enhances the horror experience.
So, there you have it. Laugh if you want. Youāll laugh more when I tell you the second-scariest game Iāve ever played is any 3D game with underwater monsters. Even Wind Waker. But at the time, this game was scary, and the joy of recommending it now is that not only has time transformed it into something hilarious, but that itās an important video game.
Watch the video above, then play the game if you can, and when youāre done, the next time you go to give Resident Evil credit as being the grandfather of the survival horror genre, remember the only thing it had that Alone in the Dark hadnāt done four years earlier was split its inventory into a grid system.