{"id":1787,"date":"2009-12-29T14:15:54","date_gmt":"2009-12-29T20:15:54","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/lungfishopolis.com\/?p=1787"},"modified":"2009-12-03T14:38:29","modified_gmt":"2009-12-03T20:38:29","slug":"where-has-all-the-survival-horror-gone","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/greghowley.com\/lungfish\/2009\/12\/where-has-all-the-survival-horror-gone\/","title":{"rendered":"Where Has All the Survival Horror Gone?"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Wikipedia defines survival horror<\/a> as a game genre in which odds are stacked against the player so as to de-emphasize direct combat, and instead encourage the player to avoid enemies. This is generally done by limiting resources such as ammunition and healing items, and by making the player’s avatar relatively weak, as opposed to other action games like Halo<\/em> or God of War<\/em>. The setting in a survival horror game is generally dark and horrific, and challenges are often non-combat related, taking the form of puzzles, mazes, and inventory management.<\/p>\n From my perspective, survival horror titles are a dying breed. The old greats like Resident Evil 2 <\/em>and Eternal Darkness<\/em> may never be topped. Newer games like Dead Space <\/em>and Resident Evil 5<\/em> are very good, but their status as survival horror titles is questionable. A quiz<\/a> that I recently took identifies me as a “Survivor-Achiever”, apparently meaning that survival horror is my genre of choice. I’ll certainly admit that I absolutely love being startled\/scared by games. But it happens so rarely.<\/p>\n Let’s take a quick look at the history of the survival horror genre. Leaving out oldies like the Atari 2600 game Haunted House<\/em>, the genre sees its origins with the 1992 PC game Alone in the Dark<\/em>, and with Silent Hill<\/em> and the Resident Evil<\/em> series that appeared in the late 90’s on the Playstation.<\/p>\n In the early 2000’s, we see Resident Evil: Code Veronica X <\/em>and Fatal Frame<\/em>, which are both clearly within the survival horror genre, and also Eternal Darkness: Sanity’s Requiem<\/em>, one of the first non-Playstation survival horror games.<\/p>\n