Compare Lust from Beyond: M Edition prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Movie Games Lunarium. Published by Movie Games S.A.. Released on 2/10/2022. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure, Indie.

A Lovecraftian survival horror that crosses cosmic dread with body-horror aesthetics, now trimmed to an M-rated cut for broader audiences.

Lust from Beyond: M Edition is a first-person survival horror rooted firmly in the traditions of Lovecraft and H.R. Giger. You play a character pulled toward an esoteric cult and the alien dimension they worship, a place called Lusst'ghaa that looks like someone fed Giger's sketchbooks into a fever dream and let it run overnight. The M Edition is a reworked, content-reduced version of the original adult-rated release, filed down to land an M rating rather than the Adults Only classification the base game carries. That distinction matters more than it sounds, because some of the thematic weight the original leaned on is noticeably softened here. The game wears its inspirations openly. Environments borrow heavily from Giger's biomechanical aesthetic, all organic corridors and fleshy architecture that genuinely unsettles in the early hours. The pacing is deliberate and atmospheric, asking you to explore, read notes, solve light puzzles, and piece together cult lore before things escalate. For players who like their horror built on dread rather than jump-scare frequency, there is real craft in the environmental design. The creature work in Lusst'ghaa especially shows a studio that committed to a visual language and stuck with it. Stealth and basic evasion mechanics handle the survival side, though combat never feels particularly satisfying, which seems half-intentional and half a budget limitation. Where the M Edition runs into trouble is coherence. Stripping content from a game designed around transgression tends to leave visible seams. Some scenes feel incomplete, motivations blur slightly, and you occasionally sense you are watching an edited film where the cuts are a fraction too obvious. The writing is serviceable without being remarkable, and voice acting ranges from genuinely effective in quieter moments to stiff during confrontational dialogue. Steam reviews sit at 66 percent positive, which is a fair read: the game is not broken and it is not cynically assembled, but it carries real friction that keeps it from landing as confidently as it wants to. Who is this actually for? Fans of slow-burn cosmic horror who do not need mechanical depth, and anyone drawn to the specific visual territory Giger staked out decades ago. If you find that intersection of esoteric cults, alien architecture, and Lovecraftian unraveling genuinely compelling, there is enough here to reward a playthrough. Go in knowing the M Edition is the pruned version of a more extreme vision, and temper expectations accordingly. The original release exists for those who want the full picture. Kai, Scout Team

Lust from Beyond: M Edition
ActionAdventureIndie

Lust from Beyond: M Edition

Feb 10, 2022Movie Games LunariumMovie Games S.A.
GamerScout Says

A Lovecraftian survival horror that crosses cosmic dread with body-horror aesthetics, now trimmed to an M-rated cut for broader audiences.

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About Lust from Beyond: M Edition

Lust from Beyond: M Edition is a first-person survival horror rooted firmly in the traditions of Lovecraft and H.R. Giger. You play a character pulled toward an esoteric cult and the alien dimension they worship, a place called Lusst'ghaa that looks like someone fed Giger's sketchbooks into a fever dream and let it run overnight. The M Edition is a reworked, content-reduced version of the original adult-rated release, filed down to land an M rating rather than the Adults Only classification the base game carries. That distinction matters more than it sounds, because some of the thematic weight the original leaned on is noticeably softened here. The game wears its inspirations openly. Environments borrow heavily from Giger's biomechanical aesthetic, all organic corridors and fleshy architecture that genuinely unsettles in the early hours. The pacing is deliberate and atmospheric, asking you to explore, read notes, solve light puzzles, and piece together cult lore before things escalate. For players who like their horror built on dread rather than jump-scare frequency, there is real craft in the environmental design. The creature work in Lusst'ghaa especially shows a studio that committed to a visual language and stuck with it. Stealth and basic evasion mechanics handle the survival side, though combat never feels particularly satisfying, which seems half-intentional and half a budget limitation. Where the M Edition runs into trouble is coherence. Stripping content from a game designed around transgression tends to leave visible seams. Some scenes feel incomplete, motivations blur slightly, and you occasionally sense you are watching an edited film where the cuts are a fraction too obvious. The writing is serviceable without being remarkable, and voice acting ranges from genuinely effective in quieter moments to stiff during confrontational dialogue. Steam reviews sit at 66 percent positive, which is a fair read: the game is not broken and it is not cynically assembled, but it carries real friction that keeps it from landing as confidently as it wants to. Who is this actually for? Fans of slow-burn cosmic horror who do not need mechanical depth, and anyone drawn to the specific visual territory Giger staked out decades ago. If you find that intersection of esoteric cults, alien architecture, and Lovecraftian unraveling genuinely compelling, there is enough here to reward a playthrough. Go in knowing the M Edition is the pruned version of a more extreme vision, and temper expectations accordingly. The original release exists for those who want the full picture. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

steamCosmic HorrorLovecraftianGiger-InspiredCult MysteryStealth HorrorFirst-Person ExplorationBody HorrorAtmosphericSingle-Player Narrative

System Requirements

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
66%(353)

Game Info

Developer
Movie Games Lunarium
Publisher
Movie Games S.A.
Release Date
Feb 10, 2022

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