
Lempo
Finnish folklore horror done without jump-scare training wheels, if directionless dread and genuinely odd puzzle design sound like your evening, Lempo is waiting for you in the dark.
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Screenshots & Media

About Lempo
My first hour with Lempo felt less like playing a game and more like genuinely misreading a forest trail until the light was gone. That sensation, deliberate and a little merciless, is exactly what One Trick Entertainment set out to build, and for patient horror players it lands with real weight. You step into the shoes of Paul, an ordinary office worker who wanders into Metsänpeitto after a routine commute home and promptly ceases to exist in any world that follows normal rules. The premise sounds thin on paper, but the game uses that mundane starting point cleverly. Paul's everyman status makes the folklore horror feel viscerally wrong in a way that a pre-established "chosen one" protagonist never would. You explore the forest armed with a lighter and a flashlight, a compass your only navigational anchor, following spectral souls who may or may not lead you somewhere useful. There are no waypoints, no objective markers. Some reviewers found the maze-like sections in the back half genuinely exhausting; I'd frame it differently: the game is using disorientation as a design language, and it mostly earns that choice. The puzzle work is the quiet standout. Puzzles are woven into the environment rather than cordoned off as obvious "puzzle rooms," and solving them rewards slow, attentive exploration over brute-force poking. Lore surfaces through discovered notes and scattered items, including the chilling story of Dr. Nieminen, a figure whose arc moves from well-meaning physician to something far darker. Ghost encounters range from eerie to genuinely strange: one is a dancing ballerina, another plays an accordion upside down. The folklore dimension earns its place here rather than just functioning as set dressing. The sound design and atmosphere are where the game truly distinguishes itself from the crowded indie horror field, blurring the line between forest ambience and something that should not exist inside a forest at all. Where Lempo stumbles is emotional cohesion. The threads of mythology, missing-person history, and asylum experimentation do not fully converge into a satisfying arc. The ending polarises players, and the later sections grow repetitive enough that some will lose the thread before the credits roll. These are real criticisms, not nitpicks. But for the players this game is actually for, those who prioritise atmosphere and careful observation over cinematic hand-holding, the stumbles feel minor against the strength of the world One Trick Entertainment built. Kai, Scout Team
Tags
Steam Deck & Linux
Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable.
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 10/11 64 bits
- Memory
- 8 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 11
- Storage
- 14 GB available space
- Graphics
- Direct X 11.0 compatible video card with 3GB VRAM
- Processor
- Intel® Core i5-8400
Recommended
- OS
- Windows 10/11 64 bits
- Memory
- 16 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 12
- Storage
- 14 GB available space
- Graphics
- Direct X 12.0 compatible video card with 6GB VRAM
- Processor
- Intel® Core i5-8400
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Reviews & Ratings
No ratings available
Game Info
- Developer
- One Trick Entertainment
- Publisher
- PID Games
- Release Date
- Sep 7, 2023