Compare Paper Ghost Stories: Third Eye Open prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Cellar Vault Games. Published by Chorus Worldwide Games. Released on 9/4/2024. Available on PC. Genres: Adventure, Indie.

Cellar Vault Games built something rare here: a coming-of-age ghost story rooted in Malaysian culture that hits harder emotionally than most horror games triple its budget.

My first hours with Third Eye Open felt almost disarmingly quiet. You are Ting, a shy six-year-old who has just moved into a Malaysian suburb with her parents, and the game hands you a notebook full of small errands, a fixed-perspective neighbourhood to poke around, and a ghost named Xiu who only you can see. Nothing about that opening sprint is in a hurry. I want to be upfront about that, because the slow burn here is a deliberate artistic choice - and the payoff, chapter by chapter, earns every quiet minute of it. What Cellar Vault Games built is a narrative adventure spread across ten chapters, covering roughly five years of Ting's childhood. Structurally, it mixes light exploration and object-finding with notebook-guided fetch tasks, dialogue, and a rotating carousel of minigames - grilling skewers at a neighbourhood barbecue, shooting elastic bands in a schoolyard, solving simple math problems. None of it is mechanically demanding; the game is explicit about that. Occasionally the rhythm is broken by stealth sections and quick-time events, and those are the weakest spots on the card. The stealth in particular fights the fixed-perspective camera in a way that feels awkward rather than tense, and several reviewers across outlets landed on the same conclusion: you may luck your way through those moments rather than feel clever doing so. A handful of chapters also offer segments where you swap to Xiu herself, which is a smart way to add variety without piling on complexity. The thing that will either make or break this game for you is its texture. Third Eye Open is steeped in Malaysian and Chinese mythology and daily life - a Pasar Malam visit, the cultural weight of a bridge crossing, the specific anxieties of a child whose parents are quietly falling apart. The art style, rooted in Southeast Asian Joss-papercraft tradition, layers hand-cut paper sculpts into something that hovers between storybook and mild dread. Ghosts look genuinely unsettling even in that deceptively simple aesthetic. The soundtrack leans into piano and acoustic guitar, carrying a warmth that several listeners have compared to Studio Ghibli scores - soft enough to lower your guard, then suddenly the right kind of sad. Navigation and in-game instructions can be unclear at spots, and players unfamiliar with the cultural references may feel some context slipping past them, though the game provides a glossary to help. For achievement hunters, chapter select is present but has limits - chapters run long and there is no in-chapter fast-forward for text, so retrying a late-chapter stealth chase for a clean run means sitting through considerable dialogue again. That is a real quality-of-life gap. The prequel, Paper Ghost Stories: 7PM, is included with the purchase, which adds context and is a solid entry point if you want to understand how the series found its voice. Complete runs with achievement chasing land around fourteen hours. For a game at this price tier, that is a generous amount of careful storytelling. Third Eye Open is not a game for people who want pressure or mechanical depth. It is for people who want to sit inside a world that was made with care, follow a child through genuinely heavy family drama, and let Malaysian folklore work on them slowly. The emotional gut-punch in the later chapters is real, and earned. The stealth sections are not. Both things are true, and the former matters more. Kai, Scout Team

Paper Ghost Stories: Third Eye Open
AdventureIndie

Paper Ghost Stories: Third Eye Open

Sep 4, 2024Cellar Vault GamesChorus Worldwide Games
GamerScout Says

Cellar Vault Games built something rare here: a coming-of-age ghost story rooted in Malaysian culture that hits harder emotionally than most horror games triple its budget.

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About Paper Ghost Stories: Third Eye Open

My first hours with Third Eye Open felt almost disarmingly quiet. You are Ting, a shy six-year-old who has just moved into a Malaysian suburb with her parents, and the game hands you a notebook full of small errands, a fixed-perspective neighbourhood to poke around, and a ghost named Xiu who only you can see. Nothing about that opening sprint is in a hurry. I want to be upfront about that, because the slow burn here is a deliberate artistic choice - and the payoff, chapter by chapter, earns every quiet minute of it. What Cellar Vault Games built is a narrative adventure spread across ten chapters, covering roughly five years of Ting's childhood. Structurally, it mixes light exploration and object-finding with notebook-guided fetch tasks, dialogue, and a rotating carousel of minigames - grilling skewers at a neighbourhood barbecue, shooting elastic bands in a schoolyard, solving simple math problems. None of it is mechanically demanding; the game is explicit about that. Occasionally the rhythm is broken by stealth sections and quick-time events, and those are the weakest spots on the card. The stealth in particular fights the fixed-perspective camera in a way that feels awkward rather than tense, and several reviewers across outlets landed on the same conclusion: you may luck your way through those moments rather than feel clever doing so. A handful of chapters also offer segments where you swap to Xiu herself, which is a smart way to add variety without piling on complexity. The thing that will either make or break this game for you is its texture. Third Eye Open is steeped in Malaysian and Chinese mythology and daily life - a Pasar Malam visit, the cultural weight of a bridge crossing, the specific anxieties of a child whose parents are quietly falling apart. The art style, rooted in Southeast Asian Joss-papercraft tradition, layers hand-cut paper sculpts into something that hovers between storybook and mild dread. Ghosts look genuinely unsettling even in that deceptively simple aesthetic. The soundtrack leans into piano and acoustic guitar, carrying a warmth that several listeners have compared to Studio Ghibli scores - soft enough to lower your guard, then suddenly the right kind of sad. Navigation and in-game instructions can be unclear at spots, and players unfamiliar with the cultural references may feel some context slipping past them, though the game provides a glossary to help. For achievement hunters, chapter select is present but has limits - chapters run long and there is no in-chapter fast-forward for text, so retrying a late-chapter stealth chase for a clean run means sitting through considerable dialogue again. That is a real quality-of-life gap. The prequel, Paper Ghost Stories: 7PM, is included with the purchase, which adds context and is a solid entry point if you want to understand how the series found its voice. Complete runs with achievement chasing land around fourteen hours. For a game at this price tier, that is a generous amount of careful storytelling. Third Eye Open is not a game for people who want pressure or mechanical depth. It is for people who want to sit inside a world that was made with care, follow a child through genuinely heavy family drama, and let Malaysian folklore work on them slowly. The emotional gut-punch in the later chapters is real, and earned. The stealth sections are not. Both things are true, and the former matters more. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttier:sub-5Malaysian FolkloreComing-of-AgePapercraft AestheticSupernatural HorrorGhost CompanionChapter SelectCultural NarrativeMinigame VarietySlow Burn

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10 64-bit
Memory
8 GB RAM
Storage
5 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GTX 960
Processor
Intel Core i5

Recommended

OS
Windows 10 64-bit
Memory
16 GB RAM
Storage
5 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GTX 1060
Processor
Intel Core i7

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Cellar Vault Games
Publisher
Chorus Worldwide Games
Release Date
Sep 4, 2024

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