10 Best Horror Games Of 2024

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A collage of Pyramid Head from Silent Hill 2 Remake, Julee from Slitterhead, and Anya from Mouthwashing. Custom Image by Lee D'Amato

2024 has been a landmark year for horror video games, from highly anticipated sequels like Sons of the Forest to the against-all-odds success of the Silent Hill 2 Remake. Whether it was triple-A or indie, physical or psychological, it seems like every major horror game had something new to offer this year.

Still, a select few games stood out among their peers, boasting immersive atmosphere, unrelenting frights, or fearless dives into the darkest parts of the human psyche. Based on Metacritic scores, accolades, and Screen Rant's own reviews, these are some of the best horror games of 2024.

10 Indika Is A Stylish, Surreal Iconoclast

Metascore: 80

Brooding, atmospheric, and cinematic, Indika is a narrative-focused game that tells the story of a 19th-century nun with a unique set of problems. She's an outcast among the other nuns at her convent, she's grappling with a mysterious illness she can't pray away, and she's subject to frequent visions and visits from the Devil himself. Indika is split between immersive, 3D walking simulator segments, in which the protagonist explores the convent and the world around it and solves simple puzzles, and innovative, 8-bit platforming flashbacks to her troubled past.

Indika is as disturbing as it is daring, presenting a surreal vision of an unrelentingly harsh world. It's artful and challenging, forcing the player to engage with a pointless point and perk system to augment its nihilistic narrative. It's undeniably a horror game, but it's unlike anything else on this list, and must be experienced to be believed. Available now on PC, PS5, and Xbox Series X/S, Indika earned an 80 on Metacritic, and a positive 7/10 review from Screen Rant.

9 Pacific Drive Is A Melancholy, Car-Based Survival Game

Metascore: 79

Few things are more terrifying than the prospect of running out of gas along an isolated stretch of country road. Pacific Drive takes that fear and spins it into an atmospheric game, in which players are tasked with crossing the Olympic Exclusion Zone, a span of abandoned highway in the Pacific Northwest pockmarked by inexplicably deadly anomalies. Pacific Drive plays like a standard survival game - players scrounge for resources, maintain their equipment, and seek to understand their environment by clinging to the vestiges of those who didn't make it out, while trying to avoid the same fate themselves.

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But of course, it's all themed around keeping a car fueled up and running, a prospect which is often more difficult than it seems. By turns alternately terrifying, tragic, and tranquil, Pacific Drive weaves a memorable story. Its innovative blend of the survival, horror, and driving game genres earned it a 79 on Metacritic, and an excellent 8/10 review from Screen Rant.

8 Slitterhead Is A Wildly Creative Body Horror RPG

Metascore: 62

Slitterhead is the latest creation of Keiichiro Toyama, creator of the Silent Hill, Siren, and Gravity Rush series. Those two series clearly lend a lot of their DNA to Slitterhead, a bloody body horror game with unique puzzle platforming mechanics. In Slitterhead, players control a bodiless being called a Hyoki, using it to possess unsuspecting civilians. Set amid the neon-lit back alleys of Kowlong City, it follows the Hyoki (dubbed Night Owl) and the people he possesses as they investigate a string of mysterious murders tied to the sudden appearance of mutated monsters called Slitterheads.

Between its platforming sections, Slitterhead plays like an action RPG, with a diverse cast of characters whose abilities can be leveled up throughout the game. With a Metacritic score of 62, it's clear Slitterhead was divisive. Many reviewers bristled at its repetitiveness (which does have a narrative purpose), but praised it for its undeniable and often irresistible originality, which earned it a positive 6/10 review from Screen Rant.

7 Senua's Saga: Hellblade 2 Is An Atmospheric Dark Fantasy

Metascore: 81

A sequel to Senua's Sacrifice from 2017, Senua's Saga: Hellblade 2 is a story-focused dark fantasy game by the legendary Team Ninja. It tells the story of Senua, a Viking warrior who contends with invading cannibals and territorial giants. Along the way, she experiences auditory and visual hallucinations that can serve as anything from a distraction to a danger. Stunningly rendered in grimly gory detail, Senua's Saga is a darkly fantastic, but ultimately hopeful story about the dangers of unchecked power and the malleability of destiny.

Senua's Saga is short but sweet, wavering between thrilling, no-holds-barred combat sequences and gorgeously scenic exploration scenes, occasionally featuring environmental puzzles. The second Hellblade game is currently only available for PC and Xbox Series X/S, although like the original, a PlayStation release may follow. It received an 81 on Metacritic and a glowing 9/10 review from Screen Rant, praising its widespread improvements over the original game.

6 STALKER 2 Marks A Triumphant Return To The Zone

Metascore: 73

The first new series installment in over a decade, the release of STALKER 2: Heart of Chornobyl felt like a small miracle. Developed entirely by the original Ukranian studio, GSC Game World, STALKER 2 was over 15 years in the making. It follows a new protagonist, Skif, as he delves into the irradiated Chornobyl Exclusion Zone in order to discover the truth behind an anomalous artifact that destroyed his home. As he explores the vast and deadly region, he uncovers all manner of horrors: mutated creatures, inexplicable phenomena, and, of course, cruelly selfish humans.

Survival is a struggle in STALKER 2, and not just because of the rampant bugs that have become something of a series staple, categorizing it as "Eurojank." Still, reviewers enjoyed its immersive survival mechanics, gorgeously rendered environments, tough-yet-fair difficulty, and strong sense of identity, netting it a 73 on Metacritic and a stellar 9/10 review from Screen Rant.

5 Crow Country Is A PS1-Inspired Romp Through A Haunted Theme Park

Metascore: 84

Fans of retro horror games ate well this year, but one of the most delectable dishes at the buffet was Crow Country. Developed by British studio SFB Games, known for its work on Newgrounds as Super Flash Bros. and the Switch puzzle game Snipperclips, Crow Country is an absolute throwback to PS1-era horror games in every way. Chunky characters, blocky backgrounds, and gawky gunplay adorn this delightfully simple game. It follows a special agent who comes to the titular abandoned theme park to search for its missing founder, and the strange characters she meets along the way.

With intensely challenging resource management, old-school gunplay, and terrifying surprises around every corner, Crow Country is a feast in and of itself. It received an 84 on Metacritic, and a 9/10 from Screen Rant, making it one of, if not the best Silent Hill-style throwback to come out this year.

4 Sons of the Forest Is A New-And-Improved Survival Horror Sequel

Metascore: 86

Sons of the Forest is the sequel to The Forest, and had its full launch in February 2024 after a year of early access. It plops players down on a remote island, inhabited almost exclusively by hungry cannibals and bloodthirsty mutants. Players are tasked with building and defending bases as they complete a series of story missions that bring them closer to the heart of the island's secrets, and ultiamtely, the hope of escape. Co-op is available for up to eight players, so it's possible to share the burden of gathering resources, building new structures, and staying alive.

Sons of the Forest is genuinely terrifying, with plenty of tense enemy encounters and a story that occasionally veers into the disturbing. With more impressive graphics, more realistic enemy AI, a bigger map, and a more linear story, Sons of the Forest builds on its predecessor in almost every conceivable way. It earned an 86 on Metacritic.

3 Alan Wake 2's Lake House DLC Brilliantly Crosses Over With Control

Metascore: 72

The second piece of DLC for Alan Wake 2, Screen Rant's best horror game of 2023, The Lake House primarily exists to tie the reality-bending, metafictional duology together with Remedy Entertainment's other major horror title, Control. Gameplay-wise, it's much the same as the base game: classic survival horror near-perfectly executed, with strictly limited reserves of ammo and tense, overwhelming encounters. But The Lake House takes the surreality exhibited in the base game and cranks it up to the maximum, with disorienting, ever-changing environments, and some of the most terrifying monsters the series has seen yet.

The Lake House deserves its spot on this list, if only because it's more Alan Wake - but even then, it's an excellent piece of DLC in its own right. For its brilliant expansion on the worlds of both Alan Wake and Control, its adrenaline-inducing gameplay, and an engaging story some have interpreted as a cutting satire of AI art, The Lake House earns a 72 on Metacritic.

2 Mouthwashing Is A Disturbing Dive Into Deep Space

Metascore: 86

To explain everything that makes Mouthwashing so great would be to spoil it completely, but here's the gist: it opens with the intentional crashing of the freighter ship Tulpar, which causes protective foam to spread throughout the hull. Lacking sufficient supplies to complete the journey, the crew resigns to their fate, turning on the cargo hold's ethanol-based stores of mouthwash, and then each other as dark secrets come out and their interpersonal conflicts come to a boil. Suffice it to say that the rest of the game is disturbingly surreal, hauntingly atmospheric, and unrelentingly grim.

The story is told subtly and nonlinearly, frequently flashing back and forth as new information is revealed. Gameplay is barebones, but effective, with simple environmental puzzles and challenging chase sequences. Its themes can be read variously, but everyone forms their own takeaway, and all of them equally unpleasant. It's hard to forget Mouthwashing, even after the credits roll. Its memorable characters, evocative soundtrack, and gasp-inducing twists make sure of that. One of the biggest horror game surprises this year, Mouthwashing score an 86 on Metacritic.

1 The Silent Hill 2 Remake Is Screen Rant's Best Horror Game Of 2024

Metascore: 86

No one, least of all Silent Hill fans, expected the Silent Hill 2 remake to be any good. Remaking any beloved classic is a tough sell, and this one's marketing didn't do it any favors. But when it finally came out in October, Bloober Team's take on Silent Hill 2 blew all expectations out of the water. Here was a pitch-perfect, next-gen recreation of Silent Hill 2, with almost every element of the original intact, but plenty of new twists and turns. It would never replace the original, but it would make an excellent complement to it, and would prove that the Silent Hill series still has some juice, even all these years later.

Of course, Silent Hill 2 follows James Sunderland as he comes to the fog-shrouded town in search of answers about a letter he received from his late wife. Once there, he encounters all manner of terrifingly twisted creatures, each of which is a manifestation of his own inner turmoil. A brilliant examination of guilt, grief, and trauma, Silent Hill 2 is the series' most enduring classic for a reason, and its remake does it justice in every conceivable way. As a result, with a Metacritic score of 86 and an 8/10 review from Screen Rant, the Silent Hill 2 remake cements its place as the best horror game of 2024.

Source: Metacritic (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10)

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