Dementium II HD
A horror FPS port that survived the DS-to-PC leap with more scars than polish. Dark corridors, amnesia mystery, and jank in equal measure.
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.
Screenshots & Media

About Dementium II HD
Dementium II HD is a first-person survival horror game originally built for the Nintendo DS, now ported to PC with updated visuals and a fresh coat of HD paint over mechanics that were already showing their age when the handheld version shipped. You wake up with no memory, trapped in a grim asylum environment, and the game builds its identity around oppressive darkness, limited resources, and a persistent sense of dread. If you came here from a love of early-2000s corridor horror, you will recognise the DNA immediately. The atmosphere is the strongest argument for the game's existence. Memetic Games kept the tone bleak and unrelenting, and the sound design does real work here - droning ambient noise, distant wet footsteps, a score that leans into discomfort rather than jump-scare theatrics. Walking these hallways at night with headphones on produces a specific kind of low-level anxiety that the game earns through patience rather than cheap shocks. The lighting system, while limited, creates genuine moments of claustrophobia. For a small production with budget constraints visible at every seam, the mood is surprisingly coherent. The problems are significant and worth naming clearly before you buy. Combat is clunky in a way that stops being charming quickly. Enemy AI behaves with the logic of a handheld port that was never redesigned for mouse-and-keyboard, and the targeting friction that was tolerable on a stylus becomes genuinely frustrating with a PC control scheme. Level design loops back on itself in ways that feel less like deliberate labyrinthine horror and more like resource reuse. The story, which involves the classic amnesiac patient piecing together what happened to him, delivers its mystery in fragments that rarely coalesce into anything satisfying. You get atmosphere without payoff, dread without resolution. The Metacritic score of 37 and the mixed Steam reception are not wrong exactly, but they are measuring this game against a standard it was never built to meet. This is a curiosity for horror archivists and people who played the DS original and want to revisit it on a bigger screen. It is not a polished PC experience. It is a rough, occasionally interesting artifact of a specific era of portable horror that almost nobody covered when it first released. If you are that kind of player - the kind who finds value in seeing where the seams are - there is something here worth an evening. I would not recommend it as someone's introduction to indie horror. There are better, more intentional options at every price point. But if you already know what Dementium is and you want the PC version of that specific uncomfortable DS memory, this delivers the atmosphere it promises, even when the execution underneath is creaking. Kai, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Reviews & Ratings
Game Info
- Developer
- Memetic Games
- Publisher
- Digital Tribe
- Release Date
- Dec 17, 2013