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Little Nightmares is an absolute gem of a game. The weird character design, the creepy tone, the thrilling chases, and the environmental storytelling all add up to one of the most memorable puzzle platforming games in recent memory. If you enjoyed Little Nightmares as much as we did and you want something similar to play, we’ve got you covered with similar games that will 100% scratch the itch you’re looking for.
Best Games like Little Nightmares
- Side scrollers: Limbo, Bramble the Mountain King, Inside, DARQ
- First-person games: Layers of Fear, Don’t Look Twice
- Adventure games: Dredge, FAR: Lone Sails, Jusant, Stray
- Games with combat: Hollow Knight, Scorn, Pathologic 2
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It is on the top of every “games like Little Nightmares” list for a reason. You play a small child in a large, mysterious world who must venture into an unfamiliar land and solve puzzles to survive. This game is a classic, and it functionally pioneered the way for games like Little Nightmares . [1] X Research source
- Available on: PC, Xbox, PlayStation, Nintendo Switch
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : Tonally and gameplay-wise, Limbo is functionally identical to Little Nightmares. It’s an evocative, spooky fever dream with a surprisingly deep narrative that is expressed exclusively via the environment.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : It’s black and white and it’s a 2D side scroller, but that’s kind of it.
- You'll love this game if: You loved Little Nightmares and you want to play the game that inspired it.
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In Bramble the Mountain King , you play Olle—a young boy who must rescue his kidnapped sister from mythological creatures. It’s a puzzle platformer with an isometric camera and linear gameplay.
- Available on: PC, Xbox, PlayStation, Nintendo Switch
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : It’s maybe the closest thing to a Little Nightmares unofficial sequel. These games are exceptionally similar, even down to the expressive, painterly art style.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : Your character has a name? They’re super similar.
- You'll love this game if: You want more Little Nightmares. Full-stop, period.
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This authentically creepy indie game has you play as a baby with a talking teddy bear. Every time you go to sleep, though, you drift off into a surreal, upsetting dream world where you have to solve puzzles and navigate strange encounters to survive.
- Available on: PC, Xbox, PlayStation, Nintendo Switch
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : In terms of tone, environmental design, level design, and sound design, it’s basically the same game.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : It’s a first-person game, and the narrative is a little more “front of mind” as you play.
- You'll love this game if: You thought Little Nightmares was good but you wish it had more David Lynch energy.
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This indie darling is a pixel art horror game where you’re just trying to get out of your house. The twist is…your house is actively trying to kill you. There are also multiple endings, and the gameplay is nonlinear, which means you can complete the game’s “missions” in a variety of different orders.
- Available on: PC
- Just FYI, you want this game —there are five other games named House, so it can be a bit hard to figure out which one you’re looking for.
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : Like LN, you’re a little kid just looking to survive. Both games also have a fascinating narrative bubbling beneath the surface of the gameplay.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : The pixel art is a pretty big departure stylistically, and you have much more freedom in House when it comes to how you tackle the game’s content.
- You'll love this game if: You felt like Little Nightmares went on way too long and stuffed too much repetitive gameplay into the story.
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You are a little bug tasked with saving the (also bug-filled) kingdom of Hallownest from a supernatural plague. It’s often cited as one of the most impressive, enjoyable games of all time. If you haven’t ever checked this one out and you like difficult action games with big stories, it’s hard not to recommend this one.
- Available on: PC, Xbox, PlayStation, Nintendo Switch
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : Thematically, you’re not a powerful being. You’re just a little critter running around in a dangerous world you don’t understand. The “horror” element of this game is also very subdued, which is kind of similar to the texture of Little Nightmares.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : Combat! You actually hit and kill stuff in Hollow Knight . It’s also a much harder game than LN, and the open world allows for tons of exploration. It’s very much a game about exploring in a way that LN isn’t.
- You'll love this game if: You wish Little Nightmares had combat, and you enjoy exploring stuff.
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Inside is the second game released by Playdead, the studio and developer behind Limbo . Like Limbo, it’s another side-scrolling puzzle platformer about a young man who is on the run from a dystopian authoritarian force.
- Available on: PC, Xbox, PlayStation, Nintendo Switch
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : The gameplay is functionally identical to both Limbo and Little Nightmares. It’s also doing the environmental storytelling thing, and the narrative is all contextual.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : It’s a 2D side scroller, but that’s about it.
- You'll love this game if: You loved Little Nightmares and Limbo and you want to play another game that is basically identical to them.
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Oxenfree is a narrative “choices matter” horror game about a teenage girl and her friends who stumble on something strange while out camping and drinking one night. There are puzzles, but they’re not especially difficult. It’s very much in the subgenre of high-school-students-discover-horrorifying-thing stories, like Friday the 13th or I Know What You Did Last Summer.
- Available on: PC, Xbox, PlayStation, Nintendo Switch. It’s also available on Netflix.
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : It’s a puzzle game with no combat, and the gameplay isn’t that challenging.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : The horror in Oxenfree is more evocative and psychological than it is in LN, where you’re often actively chased or attacked in kind of tense encounters.
- You'll love this game if: The horror in Little Nightmares was a little too intense for you at times and you’re looking for a more casual, narrative-focused experience.
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Gris is a platforming puzzle game produced by the very prolific studio, Devolver Digital ( Cult of Lamb, Hotline Miami, Inscryption, Death’s Door, Enter the Gungeon ). You play Gris, a young girl suffering from an incredible loss of some kind. As you advance, you gain new abilities that allow you to turn into different materials or perform different magical tasks.
- Available on: PC, Xbox, PlayStation, Nintendo Switch
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : It’s a puzzle platformer with some soft horror elements, and the narrative is all expressed via gameplay and environmental features.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : It’s much more straightforward gameplay-wise, and it’s a lot less obvious narrative-wise. There’s a lot of stuff surrounding childhood, gender, and trauma going on under the surface of Gris, and it’s not easy to unpack.
- You'll love this game if: You thought Little Nightmares was a little one-dimensional, thematically speaking, and you wanted a game with a more colorful palette.
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This may seem kind of like an odd inclusion at first: in Dredge, you play as a faceless boat captain who is hired to catch fish in a Lovecraftian-nightmare world. It’s part idle game, part collect-a-thon, and part Mad-Max -style ship upgrade party. [2] X Research source
- Available on: PC, Xbox, PlayStation, Nintendo Switch
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : The overlap here is all tone, art, and energy. Dredge has the same OH MY GOODNESS I’M BEING CHASED BY A GIANT THING I DON’T UNDERSTAND quality in its gameplay that Little Nightmares is famous for. The art is also so expressive and dream-like. The intensity of the horror is the same for both games, too: they both scare a little more than a PG-13 teen slasher flick, but well below really intense experiences like Outlast, Amnesia, or Soma.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : Well, you really only play as a boat. The game is also non-linear and totally open world, which is very different from LN.
- You'll love this game if: You really vibed with Little Nightmares when the intense chases were going on, but you weren’t thrilled by the walking simulator parts or the environmental storytelling.
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Detention is a 2D side-scrolling horror game set in 1960s Taiwan. You play as a student who is trapped in their high school alongside one of their best friends. The game is mostly a point-and-click adventure, so the gameplay is mostly puzzle-based.
- Available on: PC
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : It’s doing the environmental storytelling thing, and Detention really ramps up the horror by appealing to tone, subtext, and your imagination.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : You don’t need any dexterity to beat Detention. The game solely measures your puzzle-solving prowess.
- You'll love this game if: The gameplay of Little Nightmares was your least favorite thing about it.
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DARQ is a very weird game. You play as Lloyd, a boy trapped in a lucid dream who must solve a series of physics-based puzzles to manipulate his dream and escape from monsters. You will solve puzzles, creep around things that go bump in the night, and warp your environment using unique abilities. Oh, and in case the title didn’t send it home, the game is very dark. Like…there’s no color anywhere, and the majority of the screen will be pitch black as you play.
- Available on: PC, Xbox, PlayStation, Nintendo Switch
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : You solve puzzles, you avoid monsters, and you’re in a semi-side-scrolling horror game with an isometric camera that allows for some depth control.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : It’s much more dreary, if you can believe it. LN isn’t the cheeriest game of all time, but DARQ is very bleak. There are also some movement-based abilities that allow you to warp space, so that’s quite unique as well.
- You'll love this game if: You would have liked Little Nightmares more if it were even more oppressively bleak or you wanted more challenging puzzles.
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Brothers is a moving puzzle platformer about two brothers who are visited by the ghost of their mother. The mother explains that their father is ill and they must find and deliver the medicine he needs. The game’s narrative is vast and moving, and the gameplay is also very unique. Each joystick controls one of the brothers. You must coordinate and time your movements precisely to solve puzzles, overcome obstacles, and reach your destination.
- Available on: PC, Xbox, PlayStation, Nintendo Switch
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : The puzzle solving in Brothers is very much in the same register as Little Nightmares. The games are equally as challenging, and both games tell an expressive, moving story.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : Brothers has some tense moments, but it’s by no means a horror game. The narrative in Brothers is also much more involved and central to the game than in LN.
- You'll love this game if: You enjoyed the gameplay of Little Nightmares but you weren’t big on the horror elements, and you wish there was more of a story.
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Faith is an indie game about a priest who wanders into some mysterious woods. It’s a 2D pixel game, and gameplay is mostly exploratory, but the game has some really interesting, unique elements. For one, there are rotoscoped cutscenes that are next level creepy (check out the opening clip from this video for a little taste if you’re curious), and the sound design is beyond unsettling. It’s hard to imagine a scarier pixel art game. [3] X Research source
- Available on: PC, Nintendo Switch
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : It’s an exploratory game where you don’t have any “moves.” It’s just you wandering around an environment. There’s a light puzzle element as well.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : Art-wise and story-wise, the two have almost nothing in common. It’s also much scarier than LN in a very weird, abstract kind of way.
- You'll love this game if: You wish Little Nightmares were weirder and scarier.
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Vigil is an action-heavy sidescrolling puzzle platformer. It’s also a Metroidvania RPG with a strong core narrative and distinct Lovecraft-esque art. There’s a lot going on in this game, and it’s an extremely vibrant and expansive experience.
- Available on: PC, Nintendo Switch
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : There’s a lot of body horror.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : It’s combat-heavy, challenging, and has a much more exploration-focused narrative.
- You'll love this game if: You thought Little Nightmares would have been better as a hack-and-slash RPG. It helps if you love anime , too.
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FAR is a very unique game. You play as a nameless character inside of a ship. You explore a 2D environment by driving the ship, which you do by navigating, monitoring the boiler, operating the various stations, and pressing buttons. It’s a very vibey, meditative experience, and you can beat the game in one sitting, which is nice if you’re looking for something on the quicker side.
- Available on: PC, Xbox, PlayStation, Nintendo Switch
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : Both games are set in a dystopian world where it’s kind of unclear what happened to lead you to the situation you’re in at the start of the game. Both FAR and LN are big on environmental storytelling, too.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : You’re not really in danger in any traditional kind of way in FAR. It’s very much a “take your time and chill” kind of experience.
- You'll love this game if: You’re looking for something much more relaxing than LN, but you still want some unsettling vibes from a unique story.
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You can really put any of the Oddworld games on this list, but we’re going to recommend the original: Abe’s Odyssey. This classic from 1997 is one of the original 2D puzzle games that would later inspire games like Little Nightmares . You play Abe, a goofy little alien guy who is forced to work at a meat processing factory. When you discover that the meat you’re making is coming from your friends, you set out on a mission to escape and free as many of your friends as possible.
- Available on: PC, PlayStation
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : It’s a 2D puzzle game with a creepy tone and bizarre art design (in a good way).
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : The Oddworld games have a touch of comedy that is missing in LN, and Oddworld’s “rescue” gameplay is totally unique.
- You'll love this game if: You’re curious about the history of puzzle games and/or you loved the tone in Little Nightmares but want a more puzzle-heavy experience.
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Layers of Fear is a first-person horror adventure game. You play as a painter who may or may not be slowly losing their mind as they try to finish their final masterpiece. Along the way, you’ll hallucinate, struggle to find your way out of a mansion, and solve environmental puzzles.
- Available on: PC, Xbox, PlayStation, Nintendo Switch
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : There is zero combat. It’s also scary, but not that scary. This is definitely a step up from Little Nightmares scare-wise, but you can’t die, so the horror isn’t too bad.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : It’s a first-person game and it’s functionally an open world, which is a big difference. Layers of Fear is also relying on a very different brand of horror. It’s more intense and morbid than LN’s softer psychological horror.
- You'll love this game if: You’re dipping your toes into horror games and you want to play something a little scarier than Little Nightmares (but you aren’t ready for something seriously terrifying).
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In Stray, you play a stray cat. Well, not technically. You do have a home you’re trying to get back to, but everybody still thinks you’re a stray because you can’t talk. Because you’re a cat. It’s a puzzle-platforming game with a really fun tone and some genuinely heartwarming moments.
- Available on: PC, Xbox, PlayStation, Nintendo Switch
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : This is pure puzzle platforming. It’s taking all of the gameplay of Little Nightmares and stripping it of everything that isn’t puzzles or platforming.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : Well, it’s not a horror game. It’s actually pretty wholesome. That’s the major departure here.
- You'll love this game if: You loved playing Little Nightmares for the game itself but you aren’t that interested in the horror stuff. This is also a great game if you’re looking for a palate cleanser after LN’s very depressing story.
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Pathologic 2 is an open-world horror game where you play a plague doctor who sometimes kills people. It’s very hard to explain, but it’s frequently cited as one of the most immersive and mesmerizing gaming experiences of all time. People who love this game really love it. [4] X Research source
- Available on: PC, Xbox
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : Both games are very much interested in surreal horror and dread. They have a dream-like quality that just sort of ruins any positive vibes you might mistakenly encounter.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : The Gameplay is totally different. Pathologic ’s mechanics are much more involved.
- You'll love this game if: You thought LN was a little shallow thematically and you’re looking for a more expansive experience.
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Fran Bow is an iconic cult classic about a girl struggling with mental illness. It’s a point-and-click adventure game (for PC only) that sort of paved the way for future creepy walking simulators.
- Available on: PC, Xbox, PlayStation, Nintendo Switch
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : You’re a terrified child in a large world that you don’t understand, and bad things seem to keep happening to you.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : There’s no platforming. Fran Bow is pure puzzle gameplay.
- You'll love this game if: You’re looking for a less stressful gaming experience but still kind of want to play something creepy. This is also a great game if you’re looking to play an iconic title that radically influenced the horror genre in gaming.
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This War of Mine is a 2D side-scrolling horror crafting game where you follow anonymous citizens just trying to survive as a war wages. You’ll huddle next to candles when the power goes out, negotiate with bandits who are trying to exploit the situation, and scavenge for expired food and rat carcasses so you don’t starve to death. If you haven’t figured it out yet, this is a very depressing game.
- Available on: PC, Xbox, PlayStation, Nintendo Switch
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : Like Little Nightmares, This War of Mine is oppressively bleak and dark. You are not going to be cracking smiles or walking away feeling uplifted after playing This War of Mine. Both games also have a depressive tone that is pretty rare in gaming.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : LN is a very abstracted game. The environments, enemies, characters, and levels do not reflect reality at all. This War of Mine is a very realistic experience, and the game is very committed to driving its messages about war and humanity home.
- You'll love this game if: You enjoy resource management and you want to play a slightly more oppressive horror game.
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In Planets of Lana , you play Lana, a little girl with a cat companion who is exploring a world full of hostile robots. It’s a side-scrolling puzzle platformer with no combat, a la Limbo and Inside, but it does have an absolutely stunning art direction. The world of Planet of Lana is so painterly and delicate that it’s easy to excuse the lack of innovation on the gameplay front.
- Available on: PC, Xbox, PlayStation, Nintendo Switch
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : You’re a small child in a big, confusing world. You have no weapons, and you’re solving puzzles to avoid monsters.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : Tone-wise, Planet of Lana is pretty upbeat. The enemies in Planet are way less intimidating than they are in Little Nightmares, and it just doesn’t feel as intense.
- You'll love this game if: You loved Limbo or Inside but wish it had more of a Studio Ghibli vibe.
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The servers for Little Big Planet are in the process of being shut down so you won’t be able to play any of the online content, but if you have a PlayStation 3 or newer and a physical copy of the game, you can play the single-player campaign. Little Big Planet is sort of the original “little creature in a big world” puzzle platformer (it predates Limbo by two years), so if you really love this genre of game, it’s worth checking out.
- Available on: PlayStation (only 4, 3, the Vita, and the PSP)
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : You’re just a goofy little guy jumping around and solving simple puzzles.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : It’s a goofy romp instead of a horror-based thriller.
- You'll love this game if: You actually kind of don’t love horror games and/or you want to check out one of the originators of the puzzle platforming genre.
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White Shadows looks a lot like Limbo at a glance. It’s a black-and-white side scroller where you’re trying to solve simple puzzles and avoid monsters. Actually, yeah, it is a lot like Limbo… Still, Limbo is awesome, and White Shadows is as well. It’s a punchy little game (it only takes two hours to complete), but it’s a satisfying puzzler and platformer. It also has a really cool 1930s flapper aesthetic, which is unique.
- Available on: PC, Xbox, PlayStation
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : It’s a side-scroller puzzle platformer where you’re a delicate little critter in a big, scary world.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : It’s black and white and 100% 2D, but that’s kind of it.
- You'll love this game if: You played Limbo and desperately want more of it.
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Jusant is a very unique game. You play as a nameless character with a small hedgehog-esque companion who has decided to climb the ruins of a long-abandoned cliffside city. The climbing is sort of the entire game, and the mechanics around the climbing are very rewarding and in-depth. The game is really all about movement and solving navigational puzzles. [5] X Research source
- Available on:
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : Both games are all about mysterious worlds and environmental storytelling.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : Tonally, Jusant is kind of joyful and delightful. It’s a great game for kids, which is a radical departure from Little Nightmares.
- You'll love this game if: Your favorite part of LN was the movement and navigating obstacles.
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We’re just going to be super up front here: Another World is old, and it feels like it. This 1991 classic is absolutely beloved among gamers and game historians for being something truly fascinating, mechanically and visually, for a game from the early 90s. You play Lester, a young scientist who accidentally ends up on an alien world where threats appear around every corner.
- Available on: PC, Xbox, PlayStation, Nintendo Switch
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : Both games are very intense experiences with ambiguous stories and confusing worldbuilding.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares :
- You'll love this game if: You want to explore the historical origins of puzzle platformers and you’re in the mood for a retro game with some bizarre elements.
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Another popular game by Devolver Digital, Pikuniku is a puzzle adventure game with an upbeat, Japanese animation style and tone. It’s a very funny, relaxed game filled with friends, goofy puzzles, and fun physics.
- Available on: PC, Nintendo Switch
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : It’s a puzzle platformer, but that’s sort of it. Pikuniku is a pretty unique experience—there aren’t very many games like it out there.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : It’s delightful.
- You'll love this game if: You found Little Nightmares to be fun, but you don’t love horror, and you wish the game was inspired by a children’s cartoon from Japan.
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Another puzzle platformer 2D side scroller, Planet Alpha is a vibrant and colorful adventure. It’s a really visually stunning experience: you’ll dodge laser cannons, automated drones, and all kinds of wacky enemies. Also, it has alien whales. Alien. Whales!
- Available on: PC, Xbox, PlayStation, Nintendo Switch
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : The side-scrolling puzzling, etc. Both games are also very bold when it comes to its design decisions.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : Little Nightmares is about as bleak as a game can get, while Planet Alpha is basically Star Wars on steroids.
- You'll love this game if: You wish Little Nightmares had more action.
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Dream Alone is a cartoon-esque horror game about a little boy abandoned by his community after it falls to a deadly plague. You set out to escape and find somewhere safe to live. You’ll encounter monsters, fight off depression, and navigate an extremely hostile environment.
- Available on: PC, Nintendo Switch
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : Both games are a serious bummer emotionally. They’re also puzzle platformers where you play a small being in a big, scary world.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : Dream Alone is much more viscerally sad and upsetting than Little Nightmares. Dream Alone is also a bit more challenging. A lot of its puzzles require trial and error in a way that LN’s puzzles do not.
- You'll love this game if: You wish Limbo was even more upsetting.
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Don’t Knock Twice is a first-person horror game where you’re trying to escape a demon by performing a banishing ritual. The entire game takes place in a large manor, so it’s got a lot of classic ghost movie vibes. This game is also the only one on our list to be available on VR, which is neat if you want a really intimate experience.
- Available on: PC, Xbox, PlayStation, Nintendo Switch
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : It’s scary, but it’s not too bad. It’s a good companion with Layers of Fear in that sense. You can’t die in the game and the scares aren’t too intense for players new to the horror genre.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : This is a pure puzzle game, and the puzzles are not even remotely intuitive.
- You'll love this game if: Layers of Fear spoke to you, but you want some more elaborate puzzles.
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Scorn is a first-person survival horror game set in what might as well be Hell. The game was inspired by the artwork of H.R. Giger, who was known for constructing some creepy and horrifying biopunk-inspired work. Gameplay is split into exploration, combat, and simple puzzle-solving.
- Available on: PC, Xbox
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : Both games have innovative worldbuilding, weird character designs, and unique environments.
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : While Little Nightmares is scary, it’s more of a tense and spooky type of scary. Scorn is more body horror and gore. It’s also got combat, which LN doesn’t have.
- You'll love this game if: You didn’t think Little Nightmares was gross enough.
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We’re assuming you’re familiar with Little Nightmares 2 and Little Nightmares 3, but you may not know that there’s a prequel! Very Little Nightmares is a mobile game where you play as the iconic Girl in the Yellow Coat as she tries to escape a mansion.
- Available on: Mobile only
- How it’s the same as Little Nightmares : It’s Little Nightmares !
- How it’s different from Little Nightmares : It’s a mobile game.
- You'll love this game if: You want more Little Nightmares !
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References
- ↑ https://www.nintendoworldreport.com/review/47644/limbo-switch-review
- ↑ https://www.ign.com/articles/dredge-review
- ↑ https://www.voguehorror.com/games/game-review-faith-the-unholy-trinity-2022
- ↑ https://www.gamespot.com/reviews/pathologic-2-review-the-big-sick/1900-6417158/
- ↑ https://www.rockpapershotgun.com/jusant-review
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