
Horror Prison
A budget first-person detective horror with prison-experiment dread and puzzle exploration - worth a look if atmospheric walking sims scratch your itch, but go in with calibrated expectations.
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Screenshots & Media

About Horror Prison
My honest first impression of Horror Prison was curiosity mixed with caution. Panzo Games is a tiny developer, this thing launched at under two dollars, and nobody was covering it - which, honestly, is the exact combination that pulls me in. What I found is a first-person psychological horror game where you step into the shoes of a private detective called to investigate a high-security prison after a prisoner vanishes. The trail of blood you follow quickly stops being a simple missing-persons case. The cells, it turns out, held something worse than criminals - they held test subjects, and whatever the experimenters created is still very much present in those corridors. The core loop is exploration and puzzle-solving. You move through darkened cell blocks, piece together environmental clues about the experiments that took place, and advance by untangling the logic behind what was done to the inmates. The atmosphere leans hard on darkness and sound design - the kind of game where the ambient noise of a prison at night does more heavy lifting than any scripted jump scare. When the environmental horror works, it genuinely works. Narrow corridors, flickering light, and the implication of what happened here can carry a lot of weight if you let the game breathe. That said, Horror Prison is firmly in the micro-budget tier and wears that openly. The production is bare-bones 3D - realistic in intent if not always in execution. With only nine Steam user reviews and no critical coverage to date, there is no community consensus to fall back on, and the experience runs short by most measures. Puzzle design appears functional rather than inspired, and the detective framing is more premise than actual investigative system - you are not assembling case files or cross-referencing evidence in any mechanical sense. The horror encounters are present but unlikely to disturb seasoned fans of the genre. Who is this actually for? Horror fans who genuinely enjoy the smaller, weirder corners of Steam - the games that feel handmade even when rough. If you can find the mood in a dimly lit prison corridor and the premise of human experimentation gone wrong appeals to you on a primal level, there is something here worth an hour or two. Treat it as a short horror vignette rather than a feature-length experience, and it is much easier to appreciate on its own modest terms. Approach it expecting Outlast or Amnesia, and you will leave disappointed. Kai, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 10
- Memory
- 4 GB RAM
- Storage
- 2 GB available space
- Graphics
- Any DirectX 10 capable graphics card with 1GB VRAM
- Processor
- Intel Core i3 @ 2Ghz or equivalent
- Sound Card
- Recommended
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Reviews & Ratings
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Game Info
- Developer
- Panzo Games
- Publisher
- Downmeadowstreet
- Release Date
- Sep 21, 2024