Best PlayStation Exclusive Horror Games

Best PlayStation Exclusive Horror Games



Since survival horror’s popularity started with Resident Evil on the original PlayStation, there’s a long list of stellar PlayStation-exclusive horror games throughout the decades. Obviously, some of the big hitters, like Resident Evil and later Silent Hill titles, went to other platforms, but they are games or entries in certain series that remained PlayStation exclusive.

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Sometimes, it’s a first-party PlayStation game, which usually doesn’t go to PC, or they’re third-party games that the owners just haven’t ported. Either way, there’s a reason why horror games were highlighted in PlayStation’s 30th Anniversary video because the genre is a core part of PlayStation, then, now, and forever.

These games can be from any PlayStation generation as long as they’re still PlayStation exclusive.

10

Silent Hill

The One That Started It All

By far, the most acclaimed Silent Hill games are the first four, and out of them, only one remains exclusive to a single platform: Silent Hill. The classic game still holds up, even with its dated visuals, which makes it scary in its own way even today. Some of the best moments in the series are here, including some of the best scares.

Unlike future Silent Hill games, the original was never ported to PC, although it was added as a PS1 classic available for purchase on PS3. Hopefully, it’ll get added to PlayStation Plus in the near future, but an actual PC port would be great as well.

9

Clock Tower (PS1)

A Phenomenal Horror Adventure Game

The first Clock Tower game that was released in the States was on the PS1. It was called Clock Tower 2 in Japan, but just called Clock Tower everywhere else. A sequel to the original SNES title, Clock Tower for the PS1 nicely follows the story from where it left off previously, with protagonist Jennifer returning as well as the iconic villain Scissorman.

Like the original, it’s another point-and-click adventure game with randomized enemy encounters that’ll keep you on your toes. The title works great with the PlayStation mouse, which makes you wonder why it never released on PC. Limited Run Games brought back the SNES Clock Tower with Rewind, so hopefully, they can port the PS1 game, too.

8

Resident Evil Outbreak: File 2

One Of The Most Underrated Resident Evil Games

Resident Evil Outbreak: File #2

Released

September 9, 2004

Two Resident Evil games that don’t see enough love are RE Outbreaks 1 and 2. Taking place during the Raccoon City outbreak, these games revolve around a group of eight characters as you play through various scenarios.

Outbreak: File 2 is the most content-rich of the duo, with boss rush and enemy elimination modes that’ll really test your skills. With high replayability, great boss battles, a great soundtrack, and solid online multiplayer for the time, Resident Evil Outbreak is a fantastic RE title that deserves a modern re-release.

7

Fatal Frame 3: The Tormented

“Whatever You Do, Don’t Fall Asleep”

While Fatal Frame 1 and 2 were released on the Xbox and PS2, Fatal Frame 3 only came out on the latter. With a premise akin to Silent Hill 4: The Room, Rei and Miku dream about the Manor of Sleep, where you encounter areas from the first two games as well as brand-new ones. These old areas are tied into the story, so it’s not just a lazy rehash.

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You swap between daytime sections where you investigate your house and the nighttime dream sequences, and, like Silent Hill 4, the house becomes haunted over time, which can really freak you out. The story is powerful, too, and overall, Fatal Frame 3 remains the second-best game in the series.

6

Haunting Ground

Scary In More Ways Than One

Even though most horror games are rated M due to their violence, a few truly earn their rating. One of them is Haunting Ground. A spiritual successor to Clock Tower, Haunting Ground focuses on Fiona and a cute dog named Hewie as they venture through a massive castle filled with some of the most disturbing moments and sickening villains you’ll ever see in a horror game.

The various themes and villain motivations make this a game not for children at all. The gameplay itself is a phenomenal take on the Clock Tower formula with its distinct dynamic music and Hewie, who can get you out in a pinch. It’s not perfect, as there are some backtracking problems, but nevertheless, Haunting Ground is one of the best horror games on the PS2.

5

Siren: Blood Curse

A Definite Hidden Gem

It’s a real shame that many people haven’t played one of the greatest horror games of the seventh generation, Siren: Blood Curse. Released in 2008 as a digital-only title in the US, with no marketing whatsoever, Sony sabotaged this game hard. Siren: Blood Curse is an episodic horror game and a remake of Siren 1, and, frankly, it’s the only Siren worth playing.

This one truly nails the fear and disempowerment aspect and does it better than most other horror games. The perfect example is the hospital level, where you play as a child sneaking around the Shibito in what’s one of the best horror levels ever made. Blood Curse absolutely deserves a remaster or remake, as playing it through the cloud doesn’t do it justice.

4

The House Of The Dead 4

A Must-Own Digital-Only PS3 Game

Release Year

Platforms

Developer

Publisher

2005

Arcade, PlayStation 3

Wow Entertainment

Sega

Yes, House of the Dead 4 is available in arcades, but it’s not accessible like a PC or another console. Virtually nobody is going to spend thousands on a cabinet that takes way too much space, so the game’s essentially a PlayStation exclusive for most. One of the greatest light gun shooters of the mid-2000s, House of the Dead 4 is a direct sequel to House of the Dead 2.

Even a few areas from the second game come back, along with remixes of tunes that are superb. You carry a submachine gun here, which nicely diversifies the gameplay compared to prior titles, and the game’s built around that with hordes of zombies to battle this time. The PS3 version supports the PlayStation Move and even includes the title’s Special variant, an awesome bonus.

3

P.T.

The Best Lost Horror Game

It’s a bit wild to think that one of the biggest and most influential horror games of the 2010s was a free demo. P.T. dropped suddenly on the PlayStation store in 2014 and shook the gaming world due to it being a terrifying horror game with a powerful sense of dread.

2:01

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Within a day, people discovered it was actually a teaser for a new Hideo Kojima Silent Hill game, Silent Hills. That game ended up getting cancelled a year later, and this demo got the axe, making it lost to time. If you can find a way to play it, you’ll still experience one of the scariest games ever. Just make sure to use a guide because the puzzles are ridiculous.

2

Bloodborne

The Most Demanded Game To Get Off PlayStation

People love Bloodborne, and for many, many years, folks have demanded a remaster, a remake, a sequel, a PC port, anything really. It’s a great game with some of the best gothic horror art design of all time, but it’s no Elden Ring. Still, out of the two FromSoftware PlayStation exclusives, Bloodborne is the superior title, with far better levels and boss fights.

There are even a bunch of freaky cut bosses you can play without any external tools. That’s like something out of a creepypasta. The demand for a PC port is totally warranted, given that it only runs at 30fps, which is ridiculous for a Soulslike in the current day.

1

Until Dawn Classic

The Original Console Horror Movie-Like Game

Yes, Until Dawn is available on PC, but that’s the inferior remake with many issues not present in the original, which remains PlayStation exclusive. Until Dawn is just pure horror-movie fun. It’s nothing award-winning, but there’s a reason why so many choice-based narrative-focused horror titles released after this game, because it was so fun to play through.

This especially holds true with a group of friends. It’s one of the only single-player horror titles that work with a group as people can chime in on what you do, banter about the stupid characters, and laugh at people who actually got scared by a raccoon.

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