Compare Layers of Fear prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Anshar Studios. Published by Aspyr Media. Released on 6/15/2023. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Adventure. Metacritic score: 74/100.

Five stories of tortured artists, one UE5-powered visual showcase, and roughly 10-12 hours of corridors that rearrange themselves behind your back. Worth it for atmosphere-chasers; a tough sell if you need your horror to actually bite.

My first instinct walking into Layers of Fear (2023) was to treat it as a quick horror anthology catch-up. What I got was something harder to classify: part remake, part sequel, part repackage, all wrapped in one of the better-looking horror engines I have seen run on a mid-range PC. The pitch is that every chapter in the franchise, the Painter's Story, the Actor's Story, the Inheritance DLC, the new Final Note chapter, and a brand-new Writer framing narrative set in a lighthouse, has been rebuilt in Unreal Engine 5. The Lumen lighting tech does real work here. Environments shift, crack, and recompose around you in ways that feel genuinely alive, and load screens are almost entirely absent as rooms bleed into one another. If you have never touched a Layers of Fear game before, this is unambiguously the place to start. The core gameplay loop across all five chapters is what the genre calls a walking simulator, though that label slightly undersells how active the environment is as a participant. You move through linear paths, pick up documents and scraps of lore, solve occasional light puzzles, and watch the world rewire itself when you are not looking. A new lantern mechanic threads through each story: in the Painter's mansion you use it to hold back a pursuing ghost, while aboard the cruise ship setting of the Actor's story the same flashlight can animate mannequins blocking your path, essentially using light as a key. These additions add a small layer of interactivity that the 2016 original badly needed, though critics were right to point out that the lantern feels more necessary in the dim mansion than in the already-bright ship sections, where its presence reads more like a design checkbox than a genuine mechanic. The five stories are not equal in quality and that unevenness is probably the package's biggest honest problem. The Painter's Story is atmospheric in a claustrophobic, slow-burn way, though it leans on the same room-reshuffles so often that the trick loses its edge before the credits roll. The Actor's Story, set on a film-production cruise ship, is genuinely the creative high point: the palette shifts constantly, the metaphor of performance and identity gives the horror something to say, and the mannequin puzzle sequences are the best pure gameplay moments in the whole collection. The Writer's lighthouse story, meant to stitch everything together, lands with mixed results; it provides connective tissue for the anthology but ends abruptly and relies on voice acting that ranges from effective to flat. The Inheritance chapter, told from the Painter's daughter's child-scale perspective, has a handful of genuinely inventive moments. The Final Note, giving you the Musician wife's perspective, rounds things out without dramatically elevating the package. Where the game earns consistent praise and where I personally kept stopping mid-corridor to just look around is the audio-visual presentation. The ambient soundscape is oppressive in a good way, background noise bleeds into music that bleeds into diegetic sound so seamlessly you stop tracking the boundary. If you have a good headset, this is the game you put on to justify it. The horror itself, though, is a sticking point. Jump scares are timed predictably enough that they become a rhythm rather than a shock. Enemies exist but barely threaten, and the scripted chase moments repeat dialogue lines often enough to deflate any tension they generate. If you come in expecting something with the mechanical threat of Amnesia or the sustained dread of Alien: Isolation, you will leave disappointed. What is here is closer to an interactive dark-ride: impressive staging, vivid imagery, but little real danger. For series newcomers who want an atmospheric, story-forward horror experience across a long weekend, that is fine. For veterans who already own the 2016 original and its sequel, the honest math on new content versus what you are asked to pay is a harder calculation. Alex, Scout Team

Layers of Fear

Layers of Fear

Jun 15, 2023Anshar StudiosAspyr Media
GamerScout Says

Five stories of tortured artists, one UE5-powered visual showcase, and roughly 10-12 hours of corridors that rearrange themselves behind your back. Worth it for atmosphere-chasers; a tough sell if you need your horror to actually bite.

PCXbox
Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Platinum
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A
Historical low: €0.38

GamerScout Verdict

Series newcomers get the best possible entry point; returning players should weigh how much new content is actually worth to them.

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Price History

Historical low
€0.3811 Jun 2026
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€0.23€0.75€1.27€1.795 Jun15 Jun25 Jun5 Jul15 Jul
5 Jun — 15 Jul
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Screenshots & Media

About Layers of Fear

My first instinct walking into Layers of Fear (2023) was to treat it as a quick horror anthology catch-up. What I got was something harder to classify: part remake, part sequel, part repackage, all wrapped in one of the better-looking horror engines I have seen run on a mid-range PC. The pitch is that every chapter in the franchise, the Painter's Story, the Actor's Story, the Inheritance DLC, the new Final Note chapter, and a brand-new Writer framing narrative set in a lighthouse, has been rebuilt in Unreal Engine 5. The Lumen lighting tech does real work here. Environments shift, crack, and recompose around you in ways that feel genuinely alive, and load screens are almost entirely absent as rooms bleed into one another. If you have never touched a Layers of Fear game before, this is unambiguously the place to start. The core gameplay loop across all five chapters is what the genre calls a walking simulator, though that label slightly undersells how active the environment is as a participant. You move through linear paths, pick up documents and scraps of lore, solve occasional light puzzles, and watch the world rewire itself when you are not looking. A new lantern mechanic threads through each story: in the Painter's mansion you use it to hold back a pursuing ghost, while aboard the cruise ship setting of the Actor's story the same flashlight can animate mannequins blocking your path, essentially using light as a key. These additions add a small layer of interactivity that the 2016 original badly needed, though critics were right to point out that the lantern feels more necessary in the dim mansion than in the already-bright ship sections, where its presence reads more like a design checkbox than a genuine mechanic. The five stories are not equal in quality and that unevenness is probably the package's biggest honest problem. The Painter's Story is atmospheric in a claustrophobic, slow-burn way, though it leans on the same room-reshuffles so often that the trick loses its edge before the credits roll. The Actor's Story, set on a film-production cruise ship, is genuinely the creative high point: the palette shifts constantly, the metaphor of performance and identity gives the horror something to say, and the mannequin puzzle sequences are the best pure gameplay moments in the whole collection. The Writer's lighthouse story, meant to stitch everything together, lands with mixed results; it provides connective tissue for the anthology but ends abruptly and relies on voice acting that ranges from effective to flat. The Inheritance chapter, told from the Painter's daughter's child-scale perspective, has a handful of genuinely inventive moments. The Final Note, giving you the Musician wife's perspective, rounds things out without dramatically elevating the package. Where the game earns consistent praise and where I personally kept stopping mid-corridor to just look around is the audio-visual presentation. The ambient soundscape is oppressive in a good way, background noise bleeds into music that bleeds into diegetic sound so seamlessly you stop tracking the boundary. If you have a good headset, this is the game you put on to justify it. The horror itself, though, is a sticking point. Jump scares are timed predictably enough that they become a rhythm rather than a shock. Enemies exist but barely threaten, and the scripted chase moments repeat dialogue lines often enough to deflate any tension they generate. If you come in expecting something with the mechanical threat of Amnesia or the sustained dread of Alien: Isolation, you will leave disappointed. What is here is closer to an interactive dark-ride: impressive staging, vivid imagery, but little real danger. For series newcomers who want an atmospheric, story-forward horror experience across a long weekend, that is fine. For veterans who already own the 2016 original and its sequel, the honest math on new content versus what you are asked to pay is a harder calculation.

Alex
Alex · Scout Team

Catch-all

Tags

steamPsychological HorrorWalking SimulatorAnthologyUnreal Engine 5AtmosphericLinear NarrativeFirst-Person HorrorStory-RichHorror AnthologyUE5 ShowcaseLantern MechanicShifing EnvironmentsMultiple EndingsLore-HeavyFraming NarrativeCinematic Horror

System Requirements

Minimum

Processor
Intel Core i5-3470 (3.2 GHz) / AMD A8-7600 (3.1 GHz)
Memory
5 GB RAM
Graphics
GeForce GTX 750 Ti / AMD Radeon R7 265
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
14 GB available space
Sound Card
DirectX® 11.0 co…

Recommended

OS
Win 10 with support for DirectX 12 Agility SDK
Processor
Intel Core i7 8700K/ AMD Ryzen 5 3600
Memory
12 GB RAM
Graphics
Nvidia GTX 1070 8GB Dire…

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
74
Steam
79%(1,628)

Game Info

Developer
Anshar Studios
Publisher
Aspyr Media
Release Date
Jun 15, 2023

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Frequently asked questions about Layers of Fear

How much does Layers of Fear cost?

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What platforms is Layers of Fear available on?

Layers of Fear is available on PC, Xbox.

When was Layers of Fear released?

Layers of Fear was released on 15 June 2023.

Who developed Layers of Fear?

Layers of Fear was developed by Anshar Studios and published by Aspyr Media.

Is Layers of Fear worth buying?

Layers of Fear holds a Metacritic score of 74/100, making it one of the standout Adventure titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.