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GLaD 1: Eternal Darkness: Sanity's Requiem


On 03/01/2013 at 07:17 PM by Super Step

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So as some of you know, I'm obsessed with the number three. That's why each blog this third month of 2013, in addition to tying in at least one game to whatever I'm discussing for GLaD (Game bLog a Day, abbreviation inspired/made by Yargz, general concept by me so that I actually force myself to talk about games for once, you may have seen Sneenlantern's entry today), I'll also be making a story out of the first three images that pop up on bing.com's "trending search images." At least, at 12:30am CT when I saved the draft for this anyway, now it looks like Kanye West, Taylor Swift, and an airplane are top searches ... which, considering they're both musicians, and there's a plane, sounds like a bad omen.

Today, the top three trending hits were Rachel McAdams, animal migration, and Bobby Brown. I don't know about you, but I'm already laughing more at the possibilities than any Mad Libz story I could come up with, so I'll leave a story involving those three things to your imagination for this blog.

Onto our Game of the Day, which I chose in honor of talking about my black cat Clinger for my first BaD (blog-a-day) entry on 1up this year as well. What the hell does that have to do with anything? He's dark, and that term is in this game's title. I refuse to think hard about these things.

Eternal Darkness: Sanity's Requiem is the first survival-horror game I ever played on a console, and maybe in general, as I only played arcade shooter House of the Dead before that, if it wasn't my turn to bowl right at that moment. It might be the only horror game I've ever played.

My brother had a Playstation and Playstation 2, so I knew about Resident Evil and Silent Hill, but I was too young when they first came out, and usually uninterested by later installments, save for RE: 4 on Gamecube, which I have yet to play, and a Silent Hill 3 demo on an OPM disc I found pretty creepy.

From memory, since I only rented Eternal Darkness, the basic plot involves your character, a female protagonist with a shotgun I think, finding a book that either is, or is a rip-off of, the Necronomicon, then traveling through time to different creepy locales, controlling a different character in each.

"Now where's that saw? Bond, where'd that crazy Scottish uncle of yours go with my damn saw?"

It looks like shit in every screen shot I've found, but at the time it was creepy as hell, particularly a segment that took place mostly in an old house, where I got creeped out just walking around; and finding dead people in a pool of blood in a bathtub, but also walking around.

Let me tell you a bit about myself when it comes to horror: the psychological is far more effective than the physical, because insanity can feel a lot less controllable than a guy chasing you with an object, which doesn't scare me, so much as make the Benny Hill theme play in my head every time I watch the ending to The Shining, and Jack Nickelson has to go through that fun and wacky maze!

Every time I see some guy with a chainsaw, or axe, or a jump scare, I just think "this would be shorter if one of you just shot the asshole, I don't care if he was your husband, it's pretty obvious he's a zombie now." But what has always scared the shit out of me is the cerebral bits of The Shining (blood in elevator, tricycle twins, etc.) and those black and white images from The Ring, because little or nothing is explained, it's just chilling imagery, and the mystery implicates insanity.

Eternal Darkness understood this and created various "sanity effects" where your character would think he was trapped in a cage, despite walking around in reality, or the world would warp around you, or, in true "let's take that Psycho Mantis bit from Metal Gear Solid, and implement it in a way that will freak players the hell out through pissing them the fuck off" fashion, this:

Notice that the only two options are to delete all your saves or continue without saving; this is not a menu you ask to have pop up, it does on its own if your sanity meter gets low, and there's one that just says it's erasing your memory card without any input from you (thought it tells you there was).

Having nothing to compare it to really, I can't say if this is better than other survival horror games, but it did understand that true horror is cerebral, and knew to mess with the player's mind, as opposed to throwing out jump scares. Why the hell it was a Gamecube exclusive, I'll never know, but I'm glad it was, and that I got to experience it. Even if it did force me to rage quit, and its graphics haven't aged well according to videos and images I found, at least it knew that breaking the mind is far more frightening than breaking the body.

What's your favorite horror game, and what scares you?

 


 

Comments

Ranger1

03/01/2013 at 07:35 PM

Although I own both this and Resident Evil, I have yet to play either one. I have an over-active imagination as it is and I get creeped out easily. I always planned on playing these games in the winter when I'm laid off from rangering, but now I live in a little cottage in the boonies with coyotes that make blood-curdling noises at random intervals in the field out back after dark. Oh, well. I'll get to them eventually. I do have a point-and-click horror game for the DS called Theresia that is pretty good. I ought to finish it one of these days so I find out how the story ends...

Super Step Contributing Writer

03/01/2013 at 07:41 PM

I understand not wanting to play horror games out in the dark with coyotes. lol

I did watch several movies, like Shining and Exorcist in the dark, alone, but I'm not superstitious and don't spook easy ... until of course the movie ends, and then I suddenly feel like things are creeping up behind me. lol

Jamie Alston Staff Writer

03/01/2013 at 07:46 PM

Yeah, I'm a big chicken when it comes to these types of games.  And I do agree that Eternal Darkness understood the importance of involving the player on psycological level, rather than just jump-scares.

Super Step Contributing Writer

03/01/2013 at 08:12 PM

Especially in games, jump scares get old quick.

Michael117

03/01/2013 at 07:49 PM

I share your thoughts about psychological horror. Usually Japanese influenced horror is my favorite. I'm not scared of monsters of zombies, but ghosts and the unknown are what get under my skin. The only game I ever had a nightmare about in all my years of gaming was FEAR 1. Those are well paced games that have a balance between full throttle FPS shootouts and slowed down scare sequences. The first game, FEAR, and its expansion packs: Extraction and Perseus Mandate are my favorite. The 2nd game is okay, it's good in its own ways but it's a bit different. I haven't played the 3rd game but I'm sure it's okay as well, but in general the best one to play is the first game and its expansions. Only play the 2nd and 3rd games if you really feel the need to. The little girl Alma scares me to death. They use her in some pretty effective ways and they find ways to creep me out with her. So FEAR is the only game I ever had a nightmare about, but it's not actually the scariest game I ever played. Not even close.

The scariest game I've ever played is Fatal Frame 2 Crimson Butterfly Directors Cut. Mouthfull of a name but it's a terrifying game. The ghosts terrify me, I always feel vulnerable, and they do an excellent job with the art, lighting, sound design, music, and pacing. I've had Fatal Frame 2 for seven years and I've never beat it. I've made it like 60% through the game or more but it stresses me out so bad that I take long breaks from it and sometimes I even start over from the beginning to remember how the story starts.

I'm going to beat the game sometime, I really want to finish but I really have to be in the mood to play it. It gets under my skin in every way a great horror game should.

Super Step Contributing Writer

03/01/2013 at 08:15 PM

Oh yeah, Fatal Frame seemed like an awesome concept for a game to me, but I don't think any Sony consoles were left in the house when it came out.

I've heard of FEAR and seen footage here and there, I think, but never really played it. PC games, right? Or were they on consoles as well. I have a Dell D620, so I can't really play most newer PC titles lol.

And The Ring is my favorite horror film, and it was inspired by/based on the Japanese film, so I have to agree there.

Michael117

03/01/2013 at 10:41 PM

Fatal Frame 2 came out on Playstation 2, Xbox, and a Wii remake was released in Europe, Austrailia, and Japan. FEAR came out on PC, Xbox 360, and Playstation 3. On console the expansions were sold separately called FEAR Files. You can get FEAR on Steam with both expansions so that's slicker. The game and both expansions came out between 2005 and 2007 so the system requirements won't be quite as high. It may just work out for your D620

Super Step Contributing Writer

03/01/2013 at 10:50 PM

Hmmm maybe, but I'd have to look at my HD space, Spotify takes up a sizeable chunk. Thanks for lettiing me know!

Aboboisdaman

03/01/2013 at 07:52 PM

The first game that ever scared me was Doom. I know how that sounds. I was about 10 at the time and watching my neighbor play it. It made me nervous because it was so violent and hearing demons grunting in the darkness. I don't really get scared anymore by games. I might jump but that's about it.

Super Step Contributing Writer

03/01/2013 at 08:16 PM

Doom makes sense, I think I may have been a bit creeped out when I played an N64 version. I think I thought it was more "cool" than scary but that was a long time ago.

mothman

03/01/2013 at 08:11 PM

This is without a doubt my favourite horror game. it is the first game I felt compelled to play through more than once. The impetus for that being that if you beat the game using all 3 alignments you get to see the real ending. It had a very Lovecraftian feel to it, 

Outside of ED, my favourite horror games are Silent Hills 2,3 and 1 in that order. Again these games favoured creeping you out rather than jumping out and yelling boo!

Oh great, now you've just reminded me that I sold the game a few weeks back and I'm having sellers remorse. :)

Super Step Contributing Writer

03/01/2013 at 08:20 PM

Oh yeah, Lovecraft was a huge influence on this, and of course Metallica (make of that what you will, I liked the band lol), so I like the guy's stuff.

Well, sorry for reminding you, but I didn't make you sell it! lol And yeah, I've heard, and in the case of 3 experienced somewhat, that Silent Hill gets it as well, but I've never played a full one, though I believe my older brother completed 1 and 2.

Matt Snee Staff Writer

03/01/2013 at 08:49 PM

I've never played it but I've heard the legends.  Obviously a classy game.  Horror is hard to do right.  I like the Shining too.  That movie is freaking scary.  

It's easy to surprise people, but it's hard to create an atmosphere of dread.  I find much more entertaining.  

Super Step Contributing Writer

03/01/2013 at 09:21 PM

I was a lot more scared by The Shining as a kid, when I saw that elevator on TV, than I was watching it in full in high school. Again, mystery scares me, and you're right, atmosphere is everything in horror.

smartcelt

03/01/2013 at 09:00 PM

I own that game and you're right about it,truly scary and creepy as hell. I like it quite a bit. The Silent Hill games have always been sort of scary. I remember playing the first one in the dark late at night. I had the volume way up. Now that was scary! It was ahead of it's time, a real ground breaking title. Recently  bought Silent Hill 4:The Room. May start it this weekend. It looks very different from the others,so we will see. The PS2 game I want to pick up is Siren. I've heard that one is similar to Eternal Darkness in many ways.

Super Step Contributing Writer

03/01/2013 at 09:23 PM

I remember hearing about Siren, and of course Silent Hills are considered classics by many. Sadly, no more Sony consoles left for me, as they belonged to my brother, but let me know how Siren is if you do pick it up.

V4Viewtiful

03/01/2013 at 10:26 PM

Bobby Brown was a cheap shot, well done Smile

This game was something else, intentionally messing with your sense as you play was dirtySurprised

Super Step Contributing Writer

03/01/2013 at 10:52 PM

I actually don't know what you mean by that, I wasn't kidding when I said I literally just pulled the first three images off of Bing's most searched; I wasn't even planning on having that as part of these blogs, but I saw that looking for box art, and said "that's just too good a coincidence." lol

But yeah, this game was a damn troll! lol

Coolsetzer

03/01/2013 at 10:32 PM

The game that scared me the most was Fatal Frame! I jumped every time a ghosty would pop out at me. Plus the environments and music were just so creepy that it really started to get to me after awhile, and I had to stop playing. One day I will face my fears and return! lol I would really like to see a true "horror" game in which it messes with you psychologically the way FF did. ED sounds pretty cool. I will have to try it out.

Super Step Contributing Writer

03/01/2013 at 10:53 PM

Erectile Dysfunction certainly does mess with your head, I recommend it!

Coolsetzer

03/02/2013 at 12:30 AM

So does PE lol.

Halochief90

03/01/2013 at 11:26 PM

Always wanted to play this one. My favorite horror game would have to be Silent Hill 2. I don't think that game really scared me, but it did have a pretty creepy story and atmosphere. Amnesia: Dark Descent (which I own but haven't played) looks like one of the few horror games that would actually scare me.

Super Step Contributing Writer

03/02/2013 at 12:19 AM

Silent Hill series seems to be a lot of people's favorites.

I think I've heard of Amnesia, but I can't remember.

BrokenH

03/02/2013 at 12:30 AM

It's peculiar how Silicon Knights made this one grandiose masterpiece then failed at everything else. It's almost as if Eternal Darkness really was "cursed." Did the game itself jynx its' programmers after they lost their love for their craft & sold out? You can make up a lot of possible "what if scenarios" just thinking about it like that.

Super Step Contributing Writer

03/02/2013 at 12:35 AM

I really don't remember much of what they did after this game, I just remember thinking they were awesome for making it.

Joaquim Mira Media Manager

03/03/2013 at 09:09 PM

It's their only great game because Nintendo had their hands on it too. Otherwise? Trainwreck. Although Too Human is alright.

TripOpt55

03/02/2013 at 02:32 PM

This is a game I really wanted to play, but never have. I need to track down a copy one day.

Super Step Contributing Writer

03/02/2013 at 09:59 PM

It's really good.

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