Compare The Dark Pictures Anthology: Season One prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Supermassive Games. Published by BANDAI NAMCO Entertainment. Released on 11/18/2022. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Single Player, Multiplayer, Split Screen, Horror, Adventure.

Four standalone branching horror games in one bundle - ghost ships, witchcraft, ancient monsters, and a serial killer's hotel. Bring a friend; this thing was built for co-op.

The Dark Pictures Anthology: Season One is a bundle of four complete interactive horror games from Supermassive Games - Man of Medan, Little Hope, House of Ashes, and The Devil in Me - all rolled into one package. Each title is a standalone cinematic, choice-driven survival horror game played from a third-person perspective, where the decisions you make (and the QTEs you nail or fumble) determine who survives and how the story ends. Think less "game", more "horror movie where you hold the remote". If Until Dawn or The Quarry sounds like your scene, this is exactly that formula, just in shorter, snappier chunks of around six to seven hours each. Let me break down what you're actually getting. Man of Medan puts five friends on a ghost ship where things go very wrong, very fast - pacing is uneven but the setup is genuinely tense once it clicks. Little Hope traps college students in a fog-choked town haunted by witch trial apparitions, leaning hard into psychological horror. House of Ashes is widely considered the strongest of the four - Special Forces soldiers uncover a buried Sumerian temple full of creatures at the end of the Iraq War, and the story branches in ways that actually make you care. The Devil in Me closes the season with a documentary crew lured into a replica of H.H. Holmes' Murder Castle, drawing on slasher inspirations from Psycho to the Saw franchise. Each entry is a different horror subgenre, which keeps the anthology fresh across the full run. Now, the multiplayer side is where this bundle earns its keep for group nights. Every game ships with four distinct modes. Theatrical Cut is your standard solo playthrough. Curator's Cut unlocks after completion and flips the character perspective, revealing scenes and choices you simply cannot see on a first run - serious replay fuel. Shared Story is the online two-player co-op mode, where each player controls different characters simultaneously rather than passing a controller, and some scenes only exist in this mode. Movie Night is your local pass-the-pad option for two to five players, with the game handing out cheeky end-of-act awards like "Butter Fingers" for missed QTEs and "Grim Reaper" for killing a character. That last one is going to cause arguments. Good arguments. The kind where someone throws a cushion. Is it all brilliant? No. Man of Medan and Little Hope are weaker entries - pacing drags and character attachment can feel thin, which blunts the impact of branching choices when you genuinely do not care if someone dies. The overarching Curator narrative thread between games does not pay off in a satisfying way across the season. Some players have flagged occasional technical hiccups and visual inconsistencies across the four titles. And be aware: Movie Night is local/offline only in Season One, so "couch co-op" needs actual couch proximity. For a horror game night with a group, though, this is one of the better value propositions on PC. The per-player fun-per-hour math works out nicely when you factor in multiple playthroughs, Curator's Cut rewatches, and Shared Story runs with a remote friend. House of Ashes alone justifies the curiosity; The Devil in Me landing as the strongest season closer is a bonus. Just calibrate expectations: you are watching a very interactive horror film, not playing a traditional game. Riley, Scout Team

The Dark Pictures Anthology: Season One
Single PlayerMultiplayerSplit ScreenHorrorAdventure

The Dark Pictures Anthology: Season One

Nov 18, 2022Supermassive GamesBANDAI NAMCO Entertainment
GamerScout Says

Four standalone branching horror games in one bundle - ghost ships, witchcraft, ancient monsters, and a serial killer's hotel. Bring a friend; this thing was built for co-op.

PCXbox
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Historical low: €17.32

GamerScout Verdict

Best value for horror fans who want a co-op movie night experience across four short, choice-heavy stories with real replay depth.

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Screenshots & Media

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About The Dark Pictures Anthology: Season One

The Dark Pictures Anthology: Season One is a bundle of four complete interactive horror games from Supermassive Games - Man of Medan, Little Hope, House of Ashes, and The Devil in Me - all rolled into one package. Each title is a standalone cinematic, choice-driven survival horror game played from a third-person perspective, where the decisions you make (and the QTEs you nail or fumble) determine who survives and how the story ends. Think less "game", more "horror movie where you hold the remote". If Until Dawn or The Quarry sounds like your scene, this is exactly that formula, just in shorter, snappier chunks of around six to seven hours each. Let me break down what you're actually getting. Man of Medan puts five friends on a ghost ship where things go very wrong, very fast - pacing is uneven but the setup is genuinely tense once it clicks. Little Hope traps college students in a fog-choked town haunted by witch trial apparitions, leaning hard into psychological horror. House of Ashes is widely considered the strongest of the four - Special Forces soldiers uncover a buried Sumerian temple full of creatures at the end of the Iraq War, and the story branches in ways that actually make you care. The Devil in Me closes the season with a documentary crew lured into a replica of H.H. Holmes' Murder Castle, drawing on slasher inspirations from Psycho to the Saw franchise. Each entry is a different horror subgenre, which keeps the anthology fresh across the full run. Now, the multiplayer side is where this bundle earns its keep for group nights. Every game ships with four distinct modes. Theatrical Cut is your standard solo playthrough. Curator's Cut unlocks after completion and flips the character perspective, revealing scenes and choices you simply cannot see on a first run - serious replay fuel. Shared Story is the online two-player co-op mode, where each player controls different characters simultaneously rather than passing a controller, and some scenes only exist in this mode. Movie Night is your local pass-the-pad option for two to five players, with the game handing out cheeky end-of-act awards like "Butter Fingers" for missed QTEs and "Grim Reaper" for killing a character. That last one is going to cause arguments. Good arguments. The kind where someone throws a cushion. Is it all brilliant? No. Man of Medan and Little Hope are weaker entries - pacing drags and character attachment can feel thin, which blunts the impact of branching choices when you genuinely do not care if someone dies. The overarching Curator narrative thread between games does not pay off in a satisfying way across the season. Some players have flagged occasional technical hiccups and visual inconsistencies across the four titles. And be aware: Movie Night is local/offline only in Season One, so "couch co-op" needs actual couch proximity. For a horror game night with a group, though, this is one of the better value propositions on PC. The per-player fun-per-hour math works out nicely when you factor in multiple playthroughs, Curator's Cut rewatches, and Shared Story runs with a remote friend. House of Ashes alone justifies the curiosity; The Devil in Me landing as the strongest season closer is a bonus. Just calibrate expectations: you are watching a very interactive horror film, not playing a traditional game.

Riley
Riley · Scout Team

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Tags

steamCinematic HorrorBranching NarrativeShared Story Co-opMovie Night ModeButterfly Effect ChoicesQTE-DrivenMultiple PlaythroughsCurator's CutPass-the-Pad

System Requirements

Minimum

Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
11
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 750 Ti / AMD Radeon HD 7870
Processor
Intel Core i5-3470 / AMD FX-8350
64bit support
Yes
System requirements
Windows 7

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Game Info

Developer
Supermassive Games
Publisher
BANDAI NAMCO Entertainment
Release Date
Nov 18, 2022

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How much does The Dark Pictures Anthology: Season One cost?

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What platforms is The Dark Pictures Anthology: Season One available on?

The Dark Pictures Anthology: Season One is available on PC, Xbox.

When was The Dark Pictures Anthology: Season One released?

The Dark Pictures Anthology: Season One was released on 18 November 2022.

Who developed The Dark Pictures Anthology: Season One?

The Dark Pictures Anthology: Season One was developed by Supermassive Games and published by BANDAI NAMCO Entertainment.