Compare Amnesia: The Bunker prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Frictional Games. Published by Frictional Games. Released on 6/6/2023. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Action, Adventure, Indie. Metacritic score: 77/100.

Frictional Games strips survival horror down to its rawest nerve: one soldier, one monster, a generator running out of fuel, and zero hand-holding across six brutal hours underground.

My palms were sweating before the first encounter even happened. That alone told me something interesting was going on. Amnesia: The Bunker is the kind of tightly coiled horror experience where the atmosphere does more damage than the monster itself, and Frictional Games clearly understood that when they traded their usual linear storytelling for a semi-open, systems-driven sandbox set inside a crumbling WW1 bunker. You play as Henri Clement, a French soldier who wakes up alone in the dark after losing his friend on the battlefield. The setup is spare, almost skeletal, and that is a deliberate choice. The story unfolds through scattered notes and documents tucked into the gloom, building a portrait of what went wrong here through a disturbing chain of social betrayals and military command failures. If you rush, you will miss almost all of it. The narrative rewards the patient and the thorough, but it never holds your hand toward it. The mechanical heart of the game is the relationship between light, noise, and The Beast. The generator in your central safe room is your lifeline: keep it fueled and the lights stay on, which keeps The Beast confined to the bunker's tunnel network until you make enough noise to draw it out. Let the fuel run dry and it roams freely through every corridor. The flickering of nearby lights signals that it is close. Every footstep, every door handle, every crank of the dynamo flashlight is a potential invitation. That sound design is extraordinary, the kind that makes even the act of breathing feel like a gamble, and headphones are not optional if you want the full experience. The Beast itself operates on a finite-state machine with roughly 40 behavioral states, reacting to noise type, proximity, and frequency rather than following a scripted patrol. Fire your revolver and it will come. Set off a grenade to clear a barricaded door and you are trading progress for a very angry few minutes. The gun cannot kill it. Ammo is brutally scarce. At best you stun it long enough to drag a barrel in front of a door and sprint back to safety. The non-linear structure is where The Bunker earns its reputation. Key items like the wrench for creating shortcuts, the lighter for torches, and locker code dog tags are randomized across playthroughs, which genuinely changes the order and texture of runs. Five distinct sections of the bunker splay out from the safe room hub, and the game rarely tells you which order to tackle them. Some critics have noted that item-gated progression means the open world feel is partially illusory, and that is fair. The sandbox label is a stretch. But the freedom to solve individual problems through improvisation, whether you blast a door with your revolver, find the key, or hurl a brick through it, makes every small decision feel weighty in a way that scripted horror rarely achieves. Post-launch updates added Shell Shock Mode for the genuinely masochistic and a Custom Mode with over 30 adjustable parameters, which meaningfully extends the replayability for anyone who wants a second or third run under different conditions. What does not quite land: the story is noticeably thinner than prior Frictional games, and players coming from SOMA or even Amnesia: Rebirth for the narrative density may feel underserved. The Beast's AI, while impressive in the mid-game, has occasional moments of confusion that briefly break the spell. The single save point structure, where you can only manually save at the central safe room, is intentionally brutal and occasionally feels punishing rather than tense. These are real friction points, not deal-breakers. For horror fans who value craft over spectacle, The Bunker is the rare game where the soundscape carries as much dread as the visual design. The muddy echo of boots on stone. The distant skitter in the walls. The generator chugging down toward silence. Frictional have made something lean, handcrafted, and genuinely unsettling, and the six-to-seven-hour runtime is exactly long enough. Kai, Scout Team

Amnesia: The Bunker

Amnesia: The Bunker

Jun 6, 2023Frictional Games
GamerScout Says

Frictional Games strips survival horror down to its rawest nerve: one soldier, one monster, a generator running out of fuel, and zero hand-holding across six brutal hours underground.

PCXbox
Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Gold
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A
Historical low: €1.39

Compare Prices(0 stores)

Loading prices...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Price History

Historical low
€1.395 Jun 2026
Keyshops
€1.36€1.47€1.57€1.685 Jun12 Jun19 Jun25 Jun2 Jul
Tracking prices since 5 Jun 2026
Create alert

Screenshots & Media

About Amnesia: The Bunker

My palms were sweating before the first encounter even happened. That alone told me something interesting was going on. Amnesia: The Bunker is the kind of tightly coiled horror experience where the atmosphere does more damage than the monster itself, and Frictional Games clearly understood that when they traded their usual linear storytelling for a semi-open, systems-driven sandbox set inside a crumbling WW1 bunker. You play as Henri Clement, a French soldier who wakes up alone in the dark after losing his friend on the battlefield. The setup is spare, almost skeletal, and that is a deliberate choice. The story unfolds through scattered notes and documents tucked into the gloom, building a portrait of what went wrong here through a disturbing chain of social betrayals and military command failures. If you rush, you will miss almost all of it. The narrative rewards the patient and the thorough, but it never holds your hand toward it. The mechanical heart of the game is the relationship between light, noise, and The Beast. The generator in your central safe room is your lifeline: keep it fueled and the lights stay on, which keeps The Beast confined to the bunker's tunnel network until you make enough noise to draw it out. Let the fuel run dry and it roams freely through every corridor. The flickering of nearby lights signals that it is close. Every footstep, every door handle, every crank of the dynamo flashlight is a potential invitation. That sound design is extraordinary, the kind that makes even the act of breathing feel like a gamble, and headphones are not optional if you want the full experience. The Beast itself operates on a finite-state machine with roughly 40 behavioral states, reacting to noise type, proximity, and frequency rather than following a scripted patrol. Fire your revolver and it will come. Set off a grenade to clear a barricaded door and you are trading progress for a very angry few minutes. The gun cannot kill it. Ammo is brutally scarce. At best you stun it long enough to drag a barrel in front of a door and sprint back to safety. The non-linear structure is where The Bunker earns its reputation. Key items like the wrench for creating shortcuts, the lighter for torches, and locker code dog tags are randomized across playthroughs, which genuinely changes the order and texture of runs. Five distinct sections of the bunker splay out from the safe room hub, and the game rarely tells you which order to tackle them. Some critics have noted that item-gated progression means the open world feel is partially illusory, and that is fair. The sandbox label is a stretch. But the freedom to solve individual problems through improvisation, whether you blast a door with your revolver, find the key, or hurl a brick through it, makes every small decision feel weighty in a way that scripted horror rarely achieves. Post-launch updates added Shell Shock Mode for the genuinely masochistic and a Custom Mode with over 30 adjustable parameters, which meaningfully extends the replayability for anyone who wants a second or third run under different conditions. What does not quite land: the story is noticeably thinner than prior Frictional games, and players coming from SOMA or even Amnesia: Rebirth for the narrative density may feel underserved. The Beast's AI, while impressive in the mid-game, has occasional moments of confusion that briefly break the spell. The single save point structure, where you can only manually save at the central safe room, is intentionally brutal and occasionally feels punishing rather than tense. These are real friction points, not deal-breakers. For horror fans who value craft over spectacle, The Bunker is the rare game where the soundscape carries as much dread as the visual design. The muddy echo of boots on stone. The distant skitter in the walls. The generator chugging down toward silence. Frictional have made something lean, handcrafted, and genuinely unsettling, and the six-to-seven-hour runtime is exactly long enough.

Kai
Kai · Scout Team

Indie & narrative

Tags

Single-playerSteam AchievementsFull controller supportSteam WorkshopRemote Play TogetherFamily SharingSurvival HorrorAI-Driven EnemyGenerator MechanicRandomized Item PlacementSingle Save PointImmersive Sim ElementsNew Game PlusSound-Based StealthWW1 Setting

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 / 8 / 10, 64-bits
Processor
Core i3 / AMD FX 2.4Ghz
Memory
4 GB RAM
Graphics
OpenGL 4.0, Nvidia GTX 460 / AMD Radeon HD 5750 / Intel HD 630
Storage
35 G…

Recommended

Processor
Core i5 / Ryzen 5
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
OpenGL 4.3, Nvidia GTX 970 / AMD Radeon RX 5600 XT / Intel Xe-H…

Keep exploring

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on Amnesia: The Bunker.

Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
77

Game Info

Developer
Frictional Games
Publisher
Frictional Games
Release Date
Jun 6, 2023

Game Modes

singleplayer

Languages

Audio (1)
English
Subtitles (8)
EnglishFrenchItalianGermanSpanish - SpainPortuguese - Brazil+2 more

Features

AchievementsController Support

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

No card? Pay another way

Top up your Steam Wallet or buy crypto with any card — instant delivery, no bank account needed.

More from Frictional Games

Buy smarter: helpful guides

Amnesia: The Bunker live on Twitch

Looking for more? See games like Amnesia: The Bunker →

Frequently asked questions about Amnesia: The Bunker

How much does Amnesia: The Bunker cost?

Amnesia: The Bunker pricing changes often and varies by store, edition and region. The live price table on this page compares the cheapest in-stock offers from trusted key stores like Eneba and Kinguin, so you always see the current lowest price before you buy.

Where can I buy Amnesia: The Bunker cheapest?

Compare Amnesia: The Bunker prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is Amnesia: The Bunker available on?

Amnesia: The Bunker is available on PC, Xbox.

When was Amnesia: The Bunker released?

Amnesia: The Bunker was released on 6 June 2023.

Who developed Amnesia: The Bunker?

Amnesia: The Bunker was developed by Frictional Games.

Is Amnesia: The Bunker worth buying?

Amnesia: The Bunker holds a Metacritic score of 77/100, making it one of the standout Action titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.