Dreadout -
Using a phone UI to navigate and fight adds a layer of modern vulnerability. There’s something deeply unsettling about staring at a ghost through a tiny screen while you’re physically standing in a pitch-black hallway.
Playing DreadOut feels like watching a midnight B-movie that’s actually scary. It’s janky, the voice acting is hit-or-miss, and some of the puzzles are frustratingly cryptic—but the . It captures that specific feeling of being somewhere you aren’t supposed to be, where the veil between the living and the dead is dangerously thin. DreadOut
You play as , a high school student who gets stranded with her classmates and a teacher in an abandoned town. While her friends fall victim to supernatural forces, Linda discovers she has a "spiritual sensitivity." Her only weapon? A smartphone and a digital camera. By looking through the lens, she can see, stun, and defeat the ghosts haunting the ruins. Why It Stands Out Using a phone UI to navigate and fight
The game’s slightly dated graphics actually work in its favor. The clunky animations and dark, grainy environments create a "found footage" aesthetic that makes the jumpscares feel more raw and unpredictable. It’s janky, the voice acting is hit-or-miss, and
is a cult-classic indie horror game from Indonesia that proves you don’t need a massive budget to create genuine nightmare fuel. Released in 2014 by Digital Happiness, it draws heavy inspiration from the Fatal Frame series but pivots the setting to a decaying, modern Indonesian town steeped in local folklore. The Premise
If you’re a fan of J-Horror or looking for a supernatural experience that steps outside the usual tropes, DreadOut is a messy, terrifying gem worth a play.

