Compare Five Nights at Freddy's: Security Breach prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Steel Wool Studios. Published by ScottGames. Released on 12/16/2021. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Action, Adventure, Indie.

The neon is gorgeous, the Pizzaplex is genuinely unsettling at 3 a.m., and Glamrock Freddy might be the most endearing protector in recent horror gaming. Getting there, though, means wrestling with patchy saves, a map that lies to you, and animatronic AI that ranges from terrifying to completely absent.

My first hour inside Freddy Fazbear's Mega Pizzaplex had me genuinely charmed, which is not something I expected from a franchise historically built on keeping you locked in a chair. Steel Wool Studios swapped the claustrophobic office-camera formula for something more ambitious: a sprawling, three-story entertainment complex lit in neon pink and arcade gold, where you play as Gregory, a kid with no business being there, guided through the dark by an unusually gentle animatronic bear named Glamrock Freddy. The central relationship actually works. Freddy calls you "superstar," lets you hide inside his chest cavity when things get bad, and voices his concern in a way that gives the survival loop an emotional anchor most horror games skip entirely. The world itself is the game's strongest card. Locations like Roxy Raceway, Bonnie Bowl, and Monty Golf each carry their own visual identity, and the first time you witness the Daycare section shift from warm nursery lighting to total darkness as Moon takes over, the atmosphere lands with real weight. The soundscape deserves particular attention: Allen Simpson's score threads glittery pop-rock through the dread in a way that makes the Pizzaplex feel like a place that was genuinely alive before everything went wrong. There are collectibles scattered throughout, including lore-heavy gym bag notes and gift boxes, and optional Princess Quest arcade machines that unlock a secret ending if you pay attention. Here is where the honesty sets in. Security Breach shipped in a state that was, by most fair accounts, unfinished. Animatronics teleport. Save points are spaced in ways that punish rather than support. The map is genuinely unhelpful, omitting locked areas and objective markers in a building large enough to get lost in repeatedly. Boss encounters against enemies like Montgomery Gator have their own momentum, but enemy AI broadly oscillates between unsettlingly relentless and broken-still, which kills any sustained tension. Vanny, the masked antagonist marketed heavily before launch, receives far less screen time than her trailers implied, and the multiple endings range from meaningful to visually unfinished. A significant patch released in early 2022 addressed many launch bugs, and the game now includes the free Ruin DLC, which adds a second campaign as Cassie searching the ruined Pizzaplex, giving the overall package more value than its launch state suggested. Who is this actually for? Series fans will find lore payoffs, easter eggs, and the franchise's boldest structural leap. Newcomers comfortable with stealth-adjacent survival games and willing to occasionally consult a guide will likely finish in eight to ten hours and leave with a net positive impression, bugs and all. Players who bounced off earlier entries specifically because of the static gameplay will find this genuinely different. Players expecting a tight, polished horror experience will find the rough edges harder to forgive. The Pizzaplex as a concept, as a place, as a mood, is something I keep thinking about. That counts for more than the jank would like to take credit for. Kai, Scout Team

Five Nights at Freddy's: Security Breach

Five Nights at Freddy's: Security Breach

Dec 16, 2021Steel Wool StudiosScottGames
GamerScout Says

The neon is gorgeous, the Pizzaplex is genuinely unsettling at 3 a.m., and Glamrock Freddy might be the most endearing protector in recent horror gaming. Getting there, though, means wrestling with patchy saves, a map that lies to you, and animatronic AI that ranges from terrifying to completely absent.

PCXbox
Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Gold
Best Price Available
€0.00
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Historical low: €4.69

GamerScout Verdict

Worth it for fans of atmospheric survival horror who can tolerate rough edges; newcomers should go in with a guide and tempered expectations.

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Price History

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About Five Nights at Freddy's: Security Breach

My first hour inside Freddy Fazbear's Mega Pizzaplex had me genuinely charmed, which is not something I expected from a franchise historically built on keeping you locked in a chair. Steel Wool Studios swapped the claustrophobic office-camera formula for something more ambitious: a sprawling, three-story entertainment complex lit in neon pink and arcade gold, where you play as Gregory, a kid with no business being there, guided through the dark by an unusually gentle animatronic bear named Glamrock Freddy. The central relationship actually works. Freddy calls you "superstar," lets you hide inside his chest cavity when things get bad, and voices his concern in a way that gives the survival loop an emotional anchor most horror games skip entirely. The world itself is the game's strongest card. Locations like Roxy Raceway, Bonnie Bowl, and Monty Golf each carry their own visual identity, and the first time you witness the Daycare section shift from warm nursery lighting to total darkness as Moon takes over, the atmosphere lands with real weight. The soundscape deserves particular attention: Allen Simpson's score threads glittery pop-rock through the dread in a way that makes the Pizzaplex feel like a place that was genuinely alive before everything went wrong. There are collectibles scattered throughout, including lore-heavy gym bag notes and gift boxes, and optional Princess Quest arcade machines that unlock a secret ending if you pay attention. Here is where the honesty sets in. Security Breach shipped in a state that was, by most fair accounts, unfinished. Animatronics teleport. Save points are spaced in ways that punish rather than support. The map is genuinely unhelpful, omitting locked areas and objective markers in a building large enough to get lost in repeatedly. Boss encounters against enemies like Montgomery Gator have their own momentum, but enemy AI broadly oscillates between unsettlingly relentless and broken-still, which kills any sustained tension. Vanny, the masked antagonist marketed heavily before launch, receives far less screen time than her trailers implied, and the multiple endings range from meaningful to visually unfinished. A significant patch released in early 2022 addressed many launch bugs, and the game now includes the free Ruin DLC, which adds a second campaign as Cassie searching the ruined Pizzaplex, giving the overall package more value than its launch state suggested. Who is this actually for? Series fans will find lore payoffs, easter eggs, and the franchise's boldest structural leap. Newcomers comfortable with stealth-adjacent survival games and willing to occasionally consult a guide will likely finish in eight to ten hours and leave with a net positive impression, bugs and all. Players who bounced off earlier entries specifically because of the static gameplay will find this genuinely different. Players expecting a tight, polished horror experience will find the rough edges harder to forgive. The Pizzaplex as a concept, as a place, as a mood, is something I keep thinking about. That counts for more than the jank would like to take credit for.

Kai
Kai · Scout Team

Indie & narrative

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttier:aaaFree-Roam HorrorStealth SurvivalMultiple EndingsBoss FightsLore-HeavyAtmosphere-FirstSingle CampaignDLC IncludedAnimatronic AI

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10 (64 bit)
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 12
Storage
80 GB available space
Graphics
Nvidia GeForce GTX 1050 Ti
Processor
AMD Ryzen 5 3600, Core i5 6600K

Recommended

OS
Windows 10 (64 bit)
Memory
16 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 12
Storage
80 GB available space
Processor
AMD Ryzen 7 2700X, Intel Core i7 4790

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Game Info

Developer
Steel Wool Studios
Publisher
ScottGames
Release Date
Dec 16, 2021

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Five Nights at Freddy's: Security Breach is available on PC, Xbox.

When was Five Nights at Freddy's: Security Breach released?

Five Nights at Freddy's: Security Breach was released on 16 December 2021.

Who developed Five Nights at Freddy's: Security Breach?

Five Nights at Freddy's: Security Breach was developed by Steel Wool Studios and published by ScottGames.