dobra strscilem cala ta liste "strasznych" gier
1.Resident EvilIn Capcom's native Japan, Resident Evil is known as Biohazard - but that title doesn’t seem to do justice to this terrifying journey through the aftermath of Umbrella Corporation’s dastardly doings.
Mutated zombies, cannibalised comrades and monstrous dogs set the truly scary scene – and anyone who didn’t jump when that zombie crashed through a mirror must have nerves of steel.
2.Half-Life 2
What’s this? A science fiction title? Anyone who has played Half-Life 2 and fought through the town of Ravenholm will know just why this brilliantly scripted game deserves its place on the list.
After several dire warnings about going through Ravenholm, the player inevitably finds that they have no choice but to face up to a small hamlet overrun by zombies, crab-throwing monsters and more headcrabs than you can point a crowbar at.
On the message board, Rob Freeman agrees: "I can take Combines, I can take antlions, but playing through Ravenholm with the lights off and my headphones on? The first time I saw a fast zombie I nearly fell off my chair!"
3.Clive Barker's JerichoIn Clive Barker's Jericho, lengthy exposition sets the scene for a troop of special forces travelling into the town of Al Khalid, where an evil as old as the world itself has surfaced.
The early ‘death’ of a major character, the ubiquitous jump moments and the inescapable feeling that the main monster is toying with you make for some solidly scary gameplay.
4.Alien vs Predator 2
Ridley Scott’s Alien is one of the scariest films ever made, and in uniting the acid-filled xenomorphs with the predators from that eponymous film, this game didn’t let the side down with shocks and scares aplenty.
With the motion sensor bleeping furiously, the player is left looking at the door they expect the Alien to emerge from only to realise, often too late, that they are going to be attacked from the grate beneath their feet.
5.The 7th GuestThe 7th Guest was a puzzler with a plot involving, you’ve guessed it, seven guests assembled at an evil mansion. The thing that made this game pant-wettingly creepy, however, was the soundtrack.
As one of the first CD-ROM games, The 7th Guest had enough space on its disk to allow the developers to include video clips. The enhanced realism helped build atmosphere for the player, and the soundtrack and clips of the excellent voice acting, which you could play as a normal music CD, was a stroke of (evil) genius.
6.Doom
In today’s era of high-definition graphics and 3D worlds, it would be easy to overlook one of the most visceral thrillers of gaming history. But we haven’t.
Doom’s genius was in plunging the player into situations that they thought they were in control of and then changing the rules. Arrive in a well lit room - and suddenly the lights go out and hidden doors hiss open.
The more recent Doom 3 continued in a similar vein – and although the jump moments were a little overdone, the spooky lighting was again a major factor in its capacity to frighten.
7.BioShockIn a sea of samey first-person shooters, Bioshock was a game in which imagination and plot reared their blessed heads once more.
Spooky Little Sisters, vicious Splicers and phenomenal sound draw you in and pummel you around the head. In the nicest possible way, of course…
8.The Lurking Horror
A million miles away from the next-gen graphics and cutting-edge sound of the likes of Half-Life and BioShock lives The Lurking Horror: a text-based adventure that proves that words have as much power to scare on screen as in the books from which the game draws its inspiration.
Infocom’s classic was ported to the Amiga with sound, but the creepy sounds seemed superfluous against the genuine scares of the words themselves.
9.Silent HillA classic from the original PlayStation, Silent Hill puts the player in the shoes of Harry Mason: a man on a mission to recover his missing daughter in the game's demonically menacing eponymous town.
With the opening levels full of scuttling creatures in thick fog, this atmospheric chiller continues to scare and entertain in equal measures – and the fear kept on coming in the game’s sequels.
10.Eternal Darkness: Sanity's Requiem
An underrated Nintendo GameCube game, Eternal Darkness: Sanity's Requiem pulled off what few games manage to do – namely mess with your head.
As monstrous creatures drain your sanity in the game you begin to hear voices, see things, lose things like your inventory and even think the game has crashed or the controller has stopped working. HP Lovecraft - referenced throughout - would have been proud.
11. System Shock 2BioShock has faced criticism of being a waterlogged remake of this sci-fi chiller – but when both the re-imagining and original are as good as these two games, who cares?
System Shock 2 rewarded the more gung-ho players with a swift death, making hiding a valid and necessary tactic. On top of this SHODAN – the main villain – is perhaps one of the greatest evil AIs of all time.
12.Condemned: Criminal Origins
The relentlessly unpleasant Condemned: Criminal Origins was a popular choice of scariest game ever on the message board.
"Whereas the other games mentioned just made me paranoid of going into rooms, Condemned actually made me want to turn it off and 'try again later'," comments Bombproof Mov.
13.Project ZeroThis lesser-known PlayStation 2 and Xbox title, called Fatal Frame outside of Europe and Australia, cropped up a number of times on the message board.
Xadane comments: "This was the first game to scare the pants off me. It's set in a run-down mansion, with ghosts of people who all seem to have died in a horrible way trying to kill you, and all you have to defend yourself with is a puny camera!"
14.Thief: Deadly Shadows
A few message board users put in a vote for the stealthy Thief: Deadly Shadows, third in the Thief series, as their scariest game ever.
"Not the whole game per se," says UK Joe, "but the Shalebridge Cradle level is the single scariest part of any game I've ever played. The Shalebridge Cradle is a former orphanage, abandoned, turned into an insane asylum, then abandoned again - an ideal setting to fill with scariness."
15.Siren: Blood CurseWith more than a touch of Blair Witch about it, Siren: Blood Curse is a recent horror addition to the PlayStation Network's offering of downloadable games.
This is an episodic stealth-based horror game, set in Hanuda: a terrifying Japanese village with a history of human sacrifices and a population of 'shibito' - that is, 'corpse people'.
16.F.E.A.R
A convenient acronym for the game's covert First Encounter Assault Recon team, F.E.A.R. is also perhaps the most popular horror game on the message board.
"All these games have the 'make-you-jump' factor I'll admit, but F.E.A.R. is the only game out that will frighten you," says Karlarse. "It capitalises on the fact that little girls are horrifying, drawing inspiration from The Grudge and The Ring, and after a few levels you regret making that promise to play the whole game with the light off."