Compare Y. Village - The Visitors prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Dead Witness. Published by Dead Witness. Released on 1/29/2024. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure, Indie.

A compact Turkish horror FMV hybrid that sneaks up on you quietly, then doesn't let go. Worth a look if atmospheric dread matters more to you than gameplay complexity.

I went into Y. Village - The Visitors expecting another disposable walking-horror and came out genuinely unsettled. That reaction says something real about what Dead Witness has pulled off here with modest resources and a clear artistic intention. This is a first-person psychological horror game rooted in a real location and inspired by true events, with a screenplay by a professional horror screenwriter. That grounding gives the whole thing an uncomfortable texture that purely invented haunted houses rarely manage. The structure is lean and deliberate. You play as Batu, a man drawn to a nameless village by cryptic letters promising relief from recurring nightmares. Progress comes through reading scattered notes and watching cassette tape recordings - a mechanic that slows the pace by design. The village itself spans over ten explorable houses, and the atmosphere built across those spaces is the game's strongest asset. The sound design in particular stands out: ambient outdoor audio that actually sounds like being outside, layered with the kind of ambient wrongness that creeps under your skin before you can name the source. Jumpscares exist, but they are restrained and earned rather than cheap. The visual style shifts between something resembling low-fidelity PSX aesthetics and near-photorealistic stretches, and the blend lands better than it has any right to. A defining unusual feature is the integration of real-actor FMV footage. Cassette tape sequences and cutscenes feature live performances, which adds a documentary quality to the horror. This commitment to realism gives the supernatural and extraterrestrial elements more weight when they finally surface, because the ordinary feels genuinely ordinary first. The story maintains a satisfying sense of mystery without leaving you frustrated at the end - a balance that smaller horror titles frequently botch. The rough edges are worth naming honestly. Navigation across the village can become repetitive; players have noted that the layout requires backtracking across familiar paths more than once, which dulls the tension on later passes. The English localization is functional but imperfect - subtitle errors surface occasionally, and one FMV tape defaults to Turkish audio even on an English playthrough. There is also no mid-session save, which means you commit to finishing in one sitting. Some players found the pacing to drag during extended video segments. These are real friction points, not dismissible nitpicks. What Y. Village - The Visitors has going for it is rarer than a polished UI: it knows what kind of feeling it wants to produce and it produces it. The runtime is appropriate - short enough to feel intentional, long enough to build genuine unease. Horror fans who prioritize atmosphere and story craft over puzzle complexity or mechanical depth will find something here that most of the genre's bigger names are too cautious to attempt. It is a small game from a small team, carrying a setting that feels singular. Kai, Scout Team

Y. Village - The Visitors
ActionAdventureIndie

Y. Village - The Visitors

Jan 29, 2024Dead Witness
GamerScout Says

A compact Turkish horror FMV hybrid that sneaks up on you quietly, then doesn't let go. Worth a look if atmospheric dread matters more to you than gameplay complexity.

PC
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Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Y. Village - The Visitors

I went into Y. Village - The Visitors expecting another disposable walking-horror and came out genuinely unsettled. That reaction says something real about what Dead Witness has pulled off here with modest resources and a clear artistic intention. This is a first-person psychological horror game rooted in a real location and inspired by true events, with a screenplay by a professional horror screenwriter. That grounding gives the whole thing an uncomfortable texture that purely invented haunted houses rarely manage. The structure is lean and deliberate. You play as Batu, a man drawn to a nameless village by cryptic letters promising relief from recurring nightmares. Progress comes through reading scattered notes and watching cassette tape recordings - a mechanic that slows the pace by design. The village itself spans over ten explorable houses, and the atmosphere built across those spaces is the game's strongest asset. The sound design in particular stands out: ambient outdoor audio that actually sounds like being outside, layered with the kind of ambient wrongness that creeps under your skin before you can name the source. Jumpscares exist, but they are restrained and earned rather than cheap. The visual style shifts between something resembling low-fidelity PSX aesthetics and near-photorealistic stretches, and the blend lands better than it has any right to. A defining unusual feature is the integration of real-actor FMV footage. Cassette tape sequences and cutscenes feature live performances, which adds a documentary quality to the horror. This commitment to realism gives the supernatural and extraterrestrial elements more weight when they finally surface, because the ordinary feels genuinely ordinary first. The story maintains a satisfying sense of mystery without leaving you frustrated at the end - a balance that smaller horror titles frequently botch. The rough edges are worth naming honestly. Navigation across the village can become repetitive; players have noted that the layout requires backtracking across familiar paths more than once, which dulls the tension on later passes. The English localization is functional but imperfect - subtitle errors surface occasionally, and one FMV tape defaults to Turkish audio even on an English playthrough. There is also no mid-session save, which means you commit to finishing in one sitting. Some players found the pacing to drag during extended video segments. These are real friction points, not dismissible nitpicks. What Y. Village - The Visitors has going for it is rarer than a polished UI: it knows what kind of feeling it wants to produce and it produces it. The runtime is appropriate - short enough to feel intentional, long enough to build genuine unease. Horror fans who prioritize atmosphere and story craft over puzzle complexity or mechanical depth will find something here that most of the genre's bigger names are too cautious to attempt. It is a small game from a small team, carrying a setting that feels singular. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayertier:sub-5FMV-HorrorTrue-Events InspirationTurkish HorrorNo Mid-SavePSX-AestheticCassette Tape NarrativeSlow-Burn Dread

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
10 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce MX230 or AMD Radeon RX 550
Processor
Intel Core™ i5 or AMD Ryzen™ 5

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Dead Witness
Publisher
Dead Witness
Release Date
Jan 29, 2024

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Price History

2026-06-054.19(lowest)

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What platforms is Y. Village - The Visitors available on?

Y. Village - The Visitors is available on PC.

When was Y. Village - The Visitors released?

Y. Village - The Visitors was released on 29 January 2024.

Who developed Y. Village - The Visitors?

Y. Village - The Visitors was developed by Dead Witness.