Compare Last Days of Lazarus prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Darkania Works. Published by GrimTalin. Released on 6/22/2022. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Adventure, Indie.

A two-person Romanian studio made something genuinely strange here: four hours inside a post-Soviet apartment where grief, Orthodox iconography, and actual monsters compete for your attention. Rough in spots, unforgettable in others.

My first few minutes in Last Days of Lazarus felt like stumbling into someone else's very personal nightmare. The setting alone does more atmospheric heavy-lifting than most horror games manage in twice the runtime: a cramped Soviet-era apartment in turn-of-the-millennium Romania, snow outside, Christmas tinsel hanging next to religious icons, prescription bottles still on the table weeks after a funeral nobody wanted to attend. Darkania Works is a small Romanian studio, and that specificity of place is the game's real superpower. This is not a generic horror backdrop; it is a letter written to a particular country, a particular wound. The structure is first-person adventure with light puzzle elements and an inventory you use to piece together arcane rituals and unlock the next chapter of Lazarus's deteriorating reality. Puzzles lean toward fetching objects and slotting them into place rather than anything that will challenge seasoned point-and-click veterans. The interaction cursor is the game's most reliable frustration: on a controller especially, you will drift past clickable objects repeatedly and resort to hovering over every surface in the room until something glows. The outdoor sections, a cemetery, a monastery, a handful of open areas, feel noticeably thinner than the apartment interiors. Inside, the rooms are dense with story-telling knick-knacks: porcelain dolls, hand-written letters, blood that appears where it shouldn't. Outside, the magic dissipates a little. There is no combat, no fail state, no death. Grotesque creatures appear and you simply walk past them, which will read as either dreamlike and deliberate or disappointing depending on your tolerance for pure narrative adventure. The voice acting is the other honest problem, and it's worth naming clearly. The lead performance is flat in ways that occasionally tip into accidental comedy: Lazarus can stare at a scene of genuine horror and deliver his inner monologue with the energy of someone reading a shopping list. Some reviewers found this endearing; others found it a dealbreaker. The writing itself is ambitious, threading Orthodox Christianity, post-communist political trauma, and supernatural dread into a single storyline, but the seams show around the halfway mark when the story accelerates past its own ability to land emotional beats cleanly. Characters shift motivation faster than the script earns. And yet. The community of players who did find this game have been warm about it, and I understand why. There is something genuine operating underneath the production limitations. The ritual puzzles that blend science and religious ceremony have a tactile oddness to them. The apartment, in particular, is one of the more convincingly eerie interior spaces I have spent time in, cramped and cluttered and lit like a memory. The whole experience runs around three to four hours, which is exactly the right length for what it is. A longer version of this game would expose its weaknesses further; this one knows, more or less, when to close the door. Players who gravitate toward the intimate, the handmade, and the culturally specific will find something worth sitting with here. Those looking for polished puzzle design or coherent horror pacing will hit the ceiling fast. Kai, Scout Team

Last Days of Lazarus
AdventureIndie

Last Days of Lazarus

Jun 22, 2022Darkania WorksGrimTalin
GamerScout Says

A two-person Romanian studio made something genuinely strange here: four hours inside a post-Soviet apartment where grief, Orthodox iconography, and actual monsters compete for your attention. Rough in spots, unforgettable in others.

PCXbox
Best Price Available
0.00
at N/A
Historical low: $4.74

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

Screenshot

About Last Days of Lazarus

My first few minutes in Last Days of Lazarus felt like stumbling into someone else's very personal nightmare. The setting alone does more atmospheric heavy-lifting than most horror games manage in twice the runtime: a cramped Soviet-era apartment in turn-of-the-millennium Romania, snow outside, Christmas tinsel hanging next to religious icons, prescription bottles still on the table weeks after a funeral nobody wanted to attend. Darkania Works is a small Romanian studio, and that specificity of place is the game's real superpower. This is not a generic horror backdrop; it is a letter written to a particular country, a particular wound. The structure is first-person adventure with light puzzle elements and an inventory you use to piece together arcane rituals and unlock the next chapter of Lazarus's deteriorating reality. Puzzles lean toward fetching objects and slotting them into place rather than anything that will challenge seasoned point-and-click veterans. The interaction cursor is the game's most reliable frustration: on a controller especially, you will drift past clickable objects repeatedly and resort to hovering over every surface in the room until something glows. The outdoor sections, a cemetery, a monastery, a handful of open areas, feel noticeably thinner than the apartment interiors. Inside, the rooms are dense with story-telling knick-knacks: porcelain dolls, hand-written letters, blood that appears where it shouldn't. Outside, the magic dissipates a little. There is no combat, no fail state, no death. Grotesque creatures appear and you simply walk past them, which will read as either dreamlike and deliberate or disappointing depending on your tolerance for pure narrative adventure. The voice acting is the other honest problem, and it's worth naming clearly. The lead performance is flat in ways that occasionally tip into accidental comedy: Lazarus can stare at a scene of genuine horror and deliver his inner monologue with the energy of someone reading a shopping list. Some reviewers found this endearing; others found it a dealbreaker. The writing itself is ambitious, threading Orthodox Christianity, post-communist political trauma, and supernatural dread into a single storyline, but the seams show around the halfway mark when the story accelerates past its own ability to land emotional beats cleanly. Characters shift motivation faster than the script earns. And yet. The community of players who did find this game have been warm about it, and I understand why. There is something genuine operating underneath the production limitations. The ritual puzzles that blend science and religious ceremony have a tactile oddness to them. The apartment, in particular, is one of the more convincingly eerie interior spaces I have spent time in, cramped and cluttered and lit like a memory. The whole experience runs around three to four hours, which is exactly the right length for what it is. A longer version of this game would expose its weaknesses further; this one knows, more or less, when to close the door. Players who gravitate toward the intimate, the handmade, and the culturally specific will find something worth sitting with here. Those looking for polished puzzle design or coherent horror pacing will hit the ceiling fast. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-5Post-Soviet SettingArcane Ritual PuzzlesNo CombatReligious IconographyWalking AdventureGrief NarrativeEastern European HorrorShort Runtime

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Verified

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Verified.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
10 GB available space
Graphics
nVidia GTX 760 / AMD R9 280
Processor
Intel Core i5 @ 2.4Ghz

Recommended

OS
Windows 7
Memory
16 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
10 GB available space
Graphics
nVidia GTX 970 / AMD R9 390
Processor
Intel Core i5 @ 3Ghz

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on Last Days of Lazarus.

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Darkania Works
Publisher
GrimTalin
Release Date
Jun 22, 2022

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

Price History

2026-06-074.74(lowest)

Frequently asked questions about Last Days of Lazarus

Where can I buy Last Days of Lazarus cheapest?

Compare Last Days of Lazarus 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 Last Days of Lazarus available on?

Last Days of Lazarus is available on PC, Xbox.

When was Last Days of Lazarus released?

Last Days of Lazarus was released on 22 June 2022.

Who developed Last Days of Lazarus?

Last Days of Lazarus was developed by Darkania Works and published by GrimTalin.