Gazettely’s 10 Best Horror Games of 2023: Scariest Releases Ranked

The 10 Horror Games That Spooked Us the Most in 2023

When it comes to horror games, 2023 was a total scream-fest. This past year saw a killer lineup of panic-inducing titles across the genre. Whether you crave pulse-pounding action, psychological mind-benders, or paranormal creeps, the top horror games of 2023 had something bone-chilling for you.

From Hollywood reboots to retro throwbacks, indie darlings to AAA blockbusters, this year was a perfect storm for fright fans. Revamped classics like Dead Space and Resident Evil 4 made old-school survival horror feel fresh again. Brand new ideas like Dredge put innovative twists on gameplay. And highly-anticipated sequels including Alan Wake 2 and Sons of the Forest built beautifully on their prequel’s foundations.

With so many varied and high-quality options, 2023 will go down as a legendary year for experiencing horror games at their best. The well-crafted scares flooded every platform in forms both familiar and new. So grab your nightlight, steel your nerves, and read on to relive the most immersive virtual thrills and chills of the year. The top 10 are lurking just ahead.

10. Blood West

Blood West

Saddle up partner, because Blood West brings horror to the wild west in epic retro fashion. This indie FPS throws players into a nightmarish version of the frontier, where demonic forces and eldritch horrors have overrun the dusty trails and tumbleweed towns. With its blocky low-poly visuals, Blood West oozes nostalgia for classic 90s shooters. Yet the gameplay feels tight and modern, providing a supremely challenging blastfest.

As the grizzled gunslinger Jim Redwood, players must blast their way through this freaky frontier, shooting up all manner of ghouls, beasts, and possessed preachers. The arsenal of Old West weaponry packs a major punch, with shotguns and rifles that kick like a mule. But ammo is limited, so precision counts. Blood West demands expert twitch reflexes and pinpoint accuracy to take down enemies before they overwhelm you.

Adding to the atmosphere is voice acting from Stephen Russell, known for playing Garrett in the Thief games. His gravelly tones as Redwood create an instantly iconic protagonist. With its relentless hordes of baddies and demanding difficulty, Blood West captures the spirit of retro shooters while providing an original setting and story. For FPS fans or horror hounds hungry for a stiff challenge, this indie darling is a must-play.

9. World of Horror

Merging Junji Ito’s manga horrors with Lovecraftian dread, World of Horror delivers a one-of-a-kind RPG experience. With its 1-bit monochrome graphics and ’80s Japan setting, WOE oozes spooky retro atmosphere. Underneath the MS Paint visuals lies a deep roguelike combat system blended with visual novel storytelling. Across multiple playthroughs, the game procedurally generates mystery tales full of disturbing rituals, paranormal encounters, and apocalyptic stakes.

In each session, you choose from 14 protagonists like the Occult-Obsessed Schoolgirl or Delinquent Skater. Then you’re thrown into the seaside town of Shiokawa, tasked with investigating creepy clues and making tough choices while fending off cosmic horrors with weapons and spells. WOE’s turn-based battles require understanding enemy weaknesses and chaining status effects. With limited healing items, fights quickly turn desperate. Death sends you right back to the start, armed with more knowledge to push further in subsequent attempts.

Beyond the strategic combat, World of Horror sinks its hooks in with addictive progression systems. Completing investigations unlocks new perks, gear, and story fragments. There are dozens of gruesome bad endings to discover across 20+ mysteries. The minimalist graphics leave the horrors to your imagination, making WOE a tense and chilling experience. For gamers craving a fresh take on RPG combat blended with psychological scares, this indie darling delivers big time.

8. Dead Space Remake

This remake of the 2008 sci-fi horror classic expertly modernizes the original while staying true to its spirit. Once again, engineer Isaac Clarke is stranded on the USG Ishimura, a mining starship overrun by horrific Necromorphs – mutated, reanimated corpses out for blood. This time around, the gruesome detail in which these gangly fiends can dismember Isaac is cranked up to new levels of gore.

Motive Studios has polished every aspect of Dead Space to a brilliant sheen. The lighting and sound design are ultra-immersive, drenching the corridors in dread. The combat hits even harder thanks to tightened controls and new mechanics like targeted dismemberment. Plus, giving Isaac a voice adds richer character interaction and storytelling. Fans will appreciate the faithfulness to the original layouts, while newcomers get to experience a finely tuned thrill ride.

Some clever adjustments make Isaac more mobile and combat more dynamic. The pace keeps up with modern shooter standards without losing the classic survival horror vibe. If anything, the ratcheted up tension and graphical fidelity make Dead Space more terrifying than ever. This remake revitalizes a genre-defining game with reverence and intelligent design updates both big and small. For hardcore fans or total newcomers, this is the definitive way to experience a horror classic to its fullest potential.

7. The Texas Chain Saw Massacre

In the flooded multiplayer horror game market, The Texas Chain Saw Massacre carves out a unique niche. Within the 4v4 format, it designates multiple player-controlled killers rather than just one. When controlling the menacing Leatherface family, coordination with fellow cannibals is key to taking down victims. For those playing as survivors, sticking together and distracting multiple threats adds satisfying strategic depth.

Where similar asymmetrical titles like Dead by Daylight lean heavily on existing horror licenses, TCM stays true to its grindhouse roots. The characters, settings, and style are all straight out of the original 1974 slasher. Given free rein on their IP, the devs pack the game with lore directly from the films. Fans will geek out over all the references, but newcomers can enjoy the gameplay with no prior knowledge.

The varied roster of family members and victims provides plenty of gameplay variety. Fleshed out progression systems encourage continued mastery of both roles. But the real star of the show is the strong online community, which ensures quick matchmaking and active lobbies. Running from Leatherface with friends leads to moments of genuine panic. Outsmarting victims as a cannibal clan creates evil cooperative joy. For anyone seeking asymmetrical multiplayer horror that stands out from the annualized franchises, The Texas Chain Saw Massacre delivers fresh blood.

6. Sons of the Forest

After years of anticipation, Sons of the Forest finally arrived to deliver open world survival horror on a whole new level. As the successor to the popular indie hit The Forest, SotF builds upon that foundation in ambitious fashion. This time around, the cannibal-infested woodlands are part of a sprawling, dynamically generated wilderness four times bigger than the original. The diverse biomes feature rocky cliffs, lush meadows, murky swamps and more, providing gorgeous and threatening eye candy.

Sons of the Forest leverages the power of new technology to create a truly living world. A real-time weather system makes prepare for shifts from sunshine to downpour on the fly. A full day/night cycle impacts visibility and enemy behavior patterns. The innovative AI even gives individual cannibal tribes roles, wants, and needs that shape their reactions. From minute to minute, no encounter plays out quite the same.

Of course, the bizarre mutants still hit all the horror notes when they chase you down. But now you have the company of Kelvin, a curious AI assistant to cooperate with. Base building reaches new heights with improved construction mechanics. Tracking down scattered story collectibles rewards exploration. For those who sank hours into The Forest, this sequel represents a meaty next chapter packed with new threats and mysteries.

5. Dead Island 2

At long last, 2023 finally brought the zombie-slashing sequel Dead Island 2 shambling to life. The original 2011 game was gory good fun, letting players decapitate the undead with abandon across tropical resorts. After over a decade in development hell, DI2 picks up that over-the-top spirit while moving the setting to the sun-soaked streets of Los Angeles.

The tongue-in-cheek tone suits the comic dismemberment perfectly. Heads and limbs fly in fountains of blood as you plow through hordes using creatively repurposed weapons. Lockers become sledgehammers, frying pans turn zombies extra crispy, and fireworks provide explosive takedowns. The killing possibilities are endless for undead-slaying combo creativity.

While the story is pure B-movie fare, the gameplay refinement shows years of tuning. The flow between melee, shooting, and parkour evasion feels fluid. Character progression provides plenty of rewards. The DLC expansions further build on the solid foundation with new zombie types, weapons, and characters.

By leaning into the goofy hack-and-slash appeal rather than true horror, Dead Island 2 succeeds as stress-free escapism. It wisely avoids taking itself too seriously. The comic tone and absurdly detailed dismemberment system make clearing the undead infestation a gleeful blast. For those who want to shut their brain off and get lost in oceans of zombies and viscera, Dead Island 2 quenches that gory thirst.

4. Lies of P

This dark reimagining of Pinocchio instantly stood out for bringing Bloodborne’s grim aesthetic to the classic fable. Set in the gothic city of Krat, you play as the puppet Pinocchio, revived after humanity’s downfall to search for his creator Geppetto. The streets crawl with twisted puppets, deranged townspeople, and other foul creatures out to destroy the last vestiges of beauty in the world.

The combat requires razor sharp reflexes and cunning tactics to survive. Lies of P takes cues from the Soulsborne formula, with challenging enemies and bosses that punish the smallest mistake. Yet the combat tweaks give Pinocchio more agile, improvisational moves to maintain an edge. Parrying attacks and capitalizing on openings with limb-shredding weapon combos feels immensely satisfying.

Beyond the white-knuckle battles lies an engrossing narrative full of player choice. With Pinocchio’s ability to lie, small deceits can unlock new paths and story outcomes. Striking visuals and environments imbue every area with melancholy grandeur. The stellar art direction creates a dreamlike fairy tale feel even in its darkest moments. For Soulslike aficionados seeking a fresh new spin, Lies of P delivers an enchanting challenge.

3. Dredge

This indie fishing sim authentically captures the tranquility of time spent at sea…until things get supernaturally sinister. As a humble fisherman, you slowly earn profits to upgrade your equipment and boat. Casting lines is relaxing busywork, and successfully reeling in catches provides a great feeling of accomplishment. The cel-shaded waves gently rock your boat underneath picturesque sunsets.

But when night falls, Dredge takes a creepy turn. Strange mutated fish start appearing on your line, unnerving the locals who oddly prize them. The hints of Lovecraftian village secrets get your imagination churning with questions. Ominous weather rolls in, and staying out too long in the darkness awakens something primordial and hungry down below.

The core fishing gameplay remains satisfyingly chill even as the horror elements ramp up. But the darkness also brings a creeping sense of dread you can feel in your gut when the soundtrack hits the right note. Moments of quiet solitude fishing make way for desperate escapes from monstrous leviathans rising from the deep. Dredge lures you in with the promise of tranquil seas, then grips tight with nightmares. For players seeking innovative genre fusion, this indie gem is a catch.

2. Resident Evil 4 Remake

Resident Evil 4 is frequently named one of the greatest games ever made, so remaking a masterpiece was a tall order. While retaining the brilliant atmosphere and action of the 2005 original, this remake brings RE4 thoroughly up to modern standards. The essential story beats are unchanged: Leon S. Kennedy gets embroiled in a Spanish village’s parasitic Las Plagas outbreak and must save the president’s daughter Ashley. But around that core, everything has been refined with care.

The over-the-shoulder shooting feels snappier, melee attacks have more impact, and exploration rewards players with hidden items and lore. Visuals strike a photorealistic tone, amplifying the creepy villager vibes. Quality of life improvements make escorting Ashley less frustrating, and she helps in combat. Expanded side modes like The Mercenaries provide bonus replayability. Whether you’re a series veteran or newcomer, this remake is the pinnacle of the Resident Evil 4 experience.

1. Alan Wake 2

After over a decade of waiting, Remedy finally delivered a sensational sequel worthy of the beloved original. Alan Wake 2 pulls zero punches when it comes to survival horror, throwing players into a disturbing psychological thriller brimming with atmosphere. This time around, you alternate between playing as Alan Wake and a new protagonist, tough FBI agent Saga Anderson. Their intertwined stories explore deeply human themes of inner darkness and redemption.

Remedy flexes their creative muscles across every aspect of design. The Pacific Northwest setting oozes Twin Peaks vibes. Eldritch enemies emerging from inky blackness provide constant dread. Imaginative imagery and scenarios blur realities in surreal fashion. Even side characters like a philosophical janitor steal scenes with humor and gravitas. Throughout the 15 hour rollercoaster, expert pacing varies tension, combat, and storytelling beats seamlessly.

With its prestige TV production values and cerebral themes, Alan Wake 2 elevated gaming horror to new heights in 2023. No other release provided such a hypnotic and moving journey into darkness. Balancing heart and horror is no easy feat, but Remedy stuck the landing. This long-awaited sequel was well worth the wait, earning critical acclaim and multiple Game of the Year awards. Alan Wake 2 is horror gaming at its most touching, terrifying and inspired.

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