"This game contains scenes of explicit violence and gore."
It's a phrase so familiar to fans of classic survival horror games that its appearance at the start of Tormented Souls almost feels comforting. Since the mid '00s, the genre has been bent and twisted to keep up with the changing times and the growing fatigue around overused mechanics in franchises like Resident Evil and Alone in the Dark. The classic survival horror tropes of the '90s — fixed camera angles, stationary aiming, and careful item management — have become all but extinct. Tormented Souls is a love letter to the classic horror games of the '90s; a true homage that embraces the genre's origins. It's a shame, then, that it largely struggles to measure up to such a high benchmark.
The game starts off on a bit of a sour note with an opening sequence that's both blurry and jittery; it's almost a callback in itself to N64-era cutscenes, but it's clear that the presentation is simply a byproduct of the game's port on Switch, as such performance issues aren't noticeable on other consoles. Once you get into the gameplay itself, however, the presentation fares much better. You awaken in a small x-ray room as protagonist Caroline Walker and immediately the fixed camera angles signify that this is old-school survival horror through and through. Soon after, you pick up a lighter that can be used to illuminate the dark surroundings, and the shadows that dance across the rooms as you walk through them is a genuinely impressive sight to behold.
As you explore, you'll encounter puzzles and enemies that will make die-hard survival horror fans grin from ear to ear. Enemies will often lie in wait, just out of sight of whatever camera happens to be fixed on Caroline; it's a strong way of ramping up tension in certain scenarios, but in others, the lack of visual cues is downright frustrating, particularly when the odd positioning of the camera causes you to lose your sense of direction. Similarly, aiming with your weapons is very much 'classic' survival horror; you can aim in any direction, but moving your feet at the same time is unfortunately an impossibility for Caroline; you're fixed in place. Thankfully, there's a dodge mechanic that can get you out of tight spots, but since you can only dodge backwards, it's useless if you're backed up against a corner.
Puzzles will also look familiar, but their implementation feels a bit more involved than other survival horror games. Tackling them requires very much the same process: you'll need to explore your surroundings, gather items, and combine them together to unlock new paths and obtain key items. The inventory screen implements the use of an on-screen cursor, which can be used to select items and move them directly into the in-game world. You can also examine items and select specific parts of them to interact with directly. The on-screen cursor makes the process feel pleasantly intuitive, and you'll be able to see the effects of your item usage in real-time.
Ultimately, although Tormented Souls is a commendable homage to classic survival horror games, its focus on the past is unfortunately its biggest downfall. Advertisements for the game bill it as a "modernisation" of the genre, but the mechanics within feel as archaic as the games it's emulating. At around seven hours or so in length, you'll have a decent time here if you're a die-hard fan of horror games that wishes some of the big names would revisit their origins, but for everyone else, the fixed camera angles and limited combat may prove more frustrating than nostalgic. Add to that some technical hiccups in the way of dodgy cutscenes and animations, and you've got a game that very much plays second fiddle to the more established survival horror games on Switch.
Comments 44
I feel like every con you've listed is supposed to be the point of a classic survival horror game lol
"Combat feels stiff and limited
Cutscenes and animations look janky and unfinished
Camera positioning can sometimes be disorientating
Only the die-hard survival horror fans need apply"
It's like you have reviewed a retro survival horror! Not for me to be honest but you could see some getting a kick out of this, lol.
Thanks for the review.
How can you say this is a "Joy": "Authentic homage to classic '90s horror games" and then list all those things in Cons?
I love old school PS1 Resident Evil so this may be up my alley.
Very harsh review... I love Reisdent Evil games and I loved this game. Get it if you like RE 1 specially, guys! Maybe the new generations won´t enjoy it as much, but this was made for people like us, that still enjoy this kind of gameplay (and you can see it easily). Highly reccommended for those!
Finished this game on PC with my best friend. We absolutely loved it. If your a fan of the classic horror games like Silent Hill and Resident Evil you'll love it. I think we paid £6 on PC.
@Zuljaras because some people will say they like “survival horror” then say most survival horror games are unplayable these days lol. I disagree but I think he is right to point out these play like RE2 not resident evil 2 remake. If that makes sense
@Zuljaras Those games came out over 20 years ago. There are adults alive today who will never have experienced old-school Survival Horror.
If I were reviewing this for me - just me - it would get a higher score and I'd be much more forgiving because I love everything Survival Horror. But if I say this game is a masterpiece, then someone tries it who has no experience with this kind of game, they're going to have a terrible time. I've seen it first-hand.
@Olliemar28 Hmm ok
I though that reviews you are putting here are personal points and experiences not predictions what might be liked/disliked by other gamers.
I might be in the wrong but I always read reviews to see the personal score of the reviewer not a prediction about the gaming community. Because that way absolutely NO game should ever get a 10 yet there are games that get 10s
Back in launch this game has performance issues even on PS5. I enjoyed it though.
Sounds like a classic Survival Horror. One to add to my wish list.
@Zuljaras This is my personal opinion. I love classic survival horror games, but do I think they objectively play well or look good by today's standards? Nope. It's nostalgia talking, and I'll readily admit that.
Some people might love Tormented Souls and embrace its willingness to feel like an authentic survival horror. But I would be lying if I said it genuinely plays well, because it often doesn't.
@Olliemar28 Thank you for the answer. Now I understand The nostalgia feel is quite powerful and I have to admit I still like it to this day
The silence and delays had me worried, but the cons and the average 6 out of ten tell me all I need to know: we get ourselves a new classic survival horror and IT'S ABOUT TIME.
Loved this on PC. If u have a hankering for 90s survival horror this is the game for you. Very Resi 1-esque. Couple of completely random puzzles bring it down a tiny bit but still a solid 8.5/10 for me.
Although it is no longer my Halloween horror game plan, I still plan on picking this up day one. Have had it pre-ordered since September.
Reviews classic style psychological horror game and doesn't mention Silent Hill once
Hmmmm
Are you being serious? This is one of the best survival horror offerings in years! If you are not in touch with the genre better review sth else...
Yeah I respect Ollie for defending his position - especially for the sake of a review informing a buying decision, I think this is probably the responsible conclusion to come to. As a wink and a nod to the classic horror fans though, I can see this review definitely reading as a bit r/whoosh-y.
I played the game on PC already - if you can still stomach 90's era PC and PS1 horror to this day, this is 100% faithful and authentic to it - scuffs and all!
Just to give a different view, as a fan of older horror games, I finished it on PS5 and enjoyed it far more than Resi 77, REmake 2, or any Silent Hill since 3.
“ plays second fiddle to the more established survival horror games on Switch”
Said list contains established survival horror games like Dark Souls and Luigis mansion 3…
Go home Nintendolife, you’re drunk!
Agree100 % with Spring Divorce but I really enjoyed Silent Hill Homecoming as well. I also get the reviewers point Tornented Souls is very hard. Limited health, limited ammo and death takes you back to your last save not the room you died. Also add in some instant deaths when Caroline enters the darkness ( a rather nasty cut scene occurs as you see Caroline’s nails breaking as she tries to claw her way out of the darkness but gets dragged in.
I can see a lot of complaining it’s too hard
Generally disturbing game such as the burnt infants in the kitchen oven and the Silent Hill type other world. Caroline having her eye removed among other things.
Joy - Authentic homage to classic '90s horror games.
Con - Literally everything that makes it an authentic homage to classic '90s horror games.
I'm definitely getting this.
Would buy this if I had some spare cash.
Sounds great, performance issues aside. I really miss the era where horror games regularly featured combat and puzzle-solving. They felt complete and satisfying in a way that modern horror games just don't. These days, you generally have to pick between fun games that aren't scary, and scary games that aren't fun, because you spend the entire game running from enemies.
With that said, enough people are mentioning crashing issues that I'll probably hold off until patches release. Nothing is more annoying.
Really excited to give this a go at some point down the road @olliemar28! Although, I still have the GC RE Remake on my backlog (I'm not proud of it, okay!) that maybe I should tackle first haha
@bronZon Outlast I and II are on Switch (Outlast being my absolute ALL time favorite), Amnesia, Blair Witch, Layers of Fear (2nd favorite).
@ironwolfajw all of those games have no combat whatsoever and are thus decidedly not SURVIVAL horror…
Honestly the only thing I wanted to know about this game was how much it suffers in performance/graphics department in comparison to other versions and instead we got list of things modern players might dislike in classic survival horror.
@Ziondood REmake is a masterpiece, and was one of the very best games on the Nintendo Gamecube. It absolutely deserves priority.
Buying this today
I'm glad to hear you loved it! It's on my official list of games to play this year! Looking forward to it
@bronZon meh, agree to disagree. Outlast you hide or run to survive, still call that survival horror? You don’t need weapons to make an amazing horror game. Either way I am picking this up to add to the horror games!
@ironwolfajw well duh, you kinda strive to survive in most games…
that doesn’t make Mario games survival platformers does it?
survival horror is a specific subgenre of horror games and none of the ones you mentioned are part of it. neither are Dark Souls or Luigis Mansion, but Nintendolife doesn’t seem to grasp that either so I guess you’re in good company here 😉
I played the demo on PC and recently played and finished it on Series S and I absolutely LOVED it... it gets ALL the CLASSIC survival horror elements perfectly (even the horrible voice acting.... if that was even intentional lol).... have been waiting for this game on the Switch ever since it's announcement and will still get this version, even if it'll clearly be a downgrade from other console ports, but buying this on the Switch and other platforms will let the devs know that they did a GREAT JOB with this title, and fans of CLASSIC survival horror, such as myself will gladly take more that may come our way!!
@Zuljaras I think the job of a reviewer is to take personal opinion out of it and instead take a pragmatic stance - stating facts and telling potential gamers what they will find.
I guarantee some games get a 8/9 but the reviewer himself isn’t keen.
I know I’ve played games that I know in the genre deserve a 8/9 but for me it’s a 3/4….
For a site like this many niche titles might not appeal to anyone on the staff.
Niche Sports and driving games are often not like by “hardcore gaming crew” but to review those type of games and say - found it dull and repetitive and didn’t understand the rules - 2 out of ten - would be factual for the reviewer but useless for anyone wanting to know about the game……
Similarly a massive let’s say Dirt racing fan might play the new Tony Stewart game and love it….. certified 10 out of 10… the game they’d been personally waiting for…. (Driving round in circles is therapeutic) and yet for 90% of the readers they might then say 10 out of 10 I’m up for that…. And find out the game isn’t for them…. You have to have a more rounded and balanced approach to reviews so people get a review useful to them.
For me that the difference between a review here or any other “non influencer” website and “influencers” who more often than not get over excited and only give their opinions… often swayed by freebies and sponsors…
Many good reviewers will tell us their opinion in part of the review - see Scullion for this… one of the best in the business for trying to give us the facts and then his opinion….
@Stocksy nicely said. I guess it depends on the reviewer.
I never take reviews seriously unless I want some technical crap, the I turn to Degital Foundry
I read reviews for the fun factor like AngryJoe etc.
This should have a score for the lovers of this genre, not other peeps. You should have put your personal score, as you say you love the genre. When a movie reviewer goes to a superhero movie, he doesn't rate it in such a way as to consider people that don't like superhero movies, he rates it according to his own view of the movie. A reviewer should always be one that loves the genre he is reviewing. You say you do, so rate it like you do, You're just going to turn people off to something awesome. That's my story, and I'm sticking to it.
"Tormented Souls - A Survival Horror Homage For Genre Nuts Only" - isn't that very harsh?
Personally I think this game is pretty much up there with genre classics like Resident 2 (the original - not the remake) and Silent Hill (the first one - was always the best of them all).
The game sure does a lot of things really, really well (like graphics, sound effects, music, pacing - combat is good too IMO, simple but tense).
Sure it's not for everyone. You have to be very patient (20 hours in so far and I think I'm just about finished - and this is with a bit of cheating with some of the puzzles). But then you're also rewarded with sequences from time to time when the game's bloody excellent and it all feels worth your time.
An 8.5 from me.
Damn you guys absolutely SUCK at game reviews. I mean like you must get only around 20% anywhere near right. The game's amazing and gets all it's key elements right.
@Olliemar28
I think it is a good idea to make potential buyers aware that some aspects of a game could considered to be old-fashioned, or even outdated, according to popular opinion.
But one thing I take issue with, which often comes up in discussions of old games, is the strange misuse of the world "nostalgia". A lot of the people who use the word in gaming discussions do not understand its meaning, but I do expect better of a professional game reviewer.
Some people have a preference for certain game mechanics, graphics styles, music styles and sound design. Sometimes people even prefer certain styles over other styles. Regardless of whether these styles could be described as dated or not, it is a misunderstanding to describe such preferences as "nostalgia".
If we think a little more broadly outside the medium of videogames, we find that many people often have preferences for certain types of music, art styles or movie genres. Probably in a majority of the cases you will find that the genres and styles people like the most, are also genres they encountered in the formative years of childhood, teens and early adulthood.
If someone has a particular fondness for new wave music from the 80's, would you describe it as "just nostalgia"? Or someone who likes horror movies because he read a lot of horror stories as a child. Is that also "just nostalgia"?
I think it is silly, and also a little demeaning to reduce people's preferences this way, and it is also a misuse of the word itself.
Nostalgia as a concept would more properly apply, when someone is reminiscing or replaying a game, they actually played a long time ago, but when talking more generally about having preferences for a certain style, it should not be used.
Personally I like both new and old games, and enjoy a variety of aspects in both. I can definitely understand the importance and hard balancing act for modern reviewers, to not let their own preferences or the feelings of older gamers about a game, bog down a review to just become worship of something old, with no relevance for younger readers. But please, stop abusing the word "nostalgia"!
Great game, yet fair score.
Show Comments
Leave A Comment
Hold on there, you need to login to post a comment...