12 PS4 Horror Games You Can’t Miss for a Scary Night In

PS4 Horror Games

Do you own a PS4 and also love horror games? If yes, you are in luck because PlayStation 4 is home to many scary releases, from blockbuster franchises such as Resident Evil to psychological indie adventures such as Inside (or the frightening news for the scared cats among you).

If you want a scary weekend, we have compiled a list of the best PS4 horror games to help you find the perfect fright-fest.

1. Dead by Daylight

Do you have what it takes to be stalked by a deranged killer and survive, or are you better suited to stalk your prey in a confined area as a hunter?

In an online world, Dead by Daylight lets you try your hand at either scenario. You can either step into the role of the helpless victim who needs to start a few generators to escape or take control of a deranged killer armed with special abilities and lethal weapons.

Although you may think it’s more enjoyable to play as the killer, Behaviour Interactive sacrificed enough effort and time and effort into the Survivors so that “cat and mouse” gameplay is fun regardless of which side you would like to play with.

Of course, killers have a little more to tinker with, but with gadgets and supplies, even survivors will start rounds to gain an advantage over their pursuer.

Dead by Daylight has a fairly easy multiplayer experience that is not overcomplicated by an overabundance of options and features and several game modes.

It was also clearly created with horror fans in mind, as it includes Leatherface (Texas Chainsaw Massacre), Michael Myers (Halloween), and Ash Williams’s DLC characters (Evil Dead).

2. Dying Light

Dying Light PS4 Horror Games

Dodging a horde of zombies is not easy, especially at night. With a mutant aberration that is fast, intelligent, and on the search for fresh meat, Dying Light has raised the bar for PS4 horror games.

You are exploring the vast land of Harran, using parkour to travel around the fictional city, and staying on rooftops to avoid running into a horde of the undead. That is if you are not cowering in the darkness, hiding from Volatile until daybreak.

While the tale is passable at best, maneuvering around the quarantine zone will keep your heart pounding and your eyes glued to your screen.

One wrong move can land you in the center of a horde of bloodthirsty zombies. Your only hope of surviving the infected city is a diverse arsenal of craftable objects and upgradeable weapons.

Dying Light significantly improved over Techland’s prior attempt at zombie thrills, Dead Island.

Faster pacing, more complex worlds, and higher stakes help create one of the best PS4 horror games, which is unforgettable and much scarier.

3. Friday the 13th: The Game

Friday the 13th: The Game

When it was released, Friday the 13th was a totally different kind of horror. It was not fun, rampant with bugs and servers that refused to let anyone play.

Gun Media was able to reverse the case and produce a Friday the 13th game that felt at home inside the series after what must have been a couple of dozen patches later.

You will need to play as one of the camp counselors in the online multiplayer to get the best horror experience.

Thanks to the impeccable use of the original score, the distant cries of fellow counselors, and slow but steady pacing, you will be absorbed in the series.

Although your primary objective is to escape Jason at all costs, you also need to search familiar places (including the residence of Jarvis and Camp Crystal Lake) to either fix a boat or car, call the police, or plan to kill Jason with other players.

Otherwise, it is a 20-minute hide-and-seek game in which Jason has access to a host of talents that make him the ultimate supernatural murderer. Does that not sound scary now?

4. The Walking Dead: Saints & Sinners

The Walking Dead: Saints & Sinners

Your playground is the world of The Walking Dead. Yeah, it is overrun by the undead and people trying to steal your supplies but do not let that discourage you from exploring New Orleans’ flooded regions.

Saints & Sinners is a highly immersive VR experience that enables you to carve your path.

In your search to uncover supplies and live another day, slink through the streets and escape the undead.

The undead are everywhere, and there are minimal protections for you.

The undead are not your only enemy. Whether it is to obstruct your advancement and rob you or challenge you to fulfill a deadly mission, every survivor has an agenda.

However, how you treat them is entirely up to you and maybe the difference between life and death.

5. The Evil Within 2

The Evil Within 2 was among the scariest PS4 horror games in 2014, so it only makes sense that Tango Gameworks will follow up with one of 2017’s scariest games.

The character Sebastian Castellanos plugs back into STEM for a trippy journey down a horror lane, hoping to be reunited with his supposedly deceased daughter.

Instead of rehashing what succeeded with The Evil Inside, the follow-up is a more expansive game with more baddies and a partially open environment.

The singing ghost lady, Anima, is undoubtedly among the most terrifying of the many horrors you will face.

This is one of many games on this list of the best PS4 horror games that benefit from excellent atmosphere and sound design, and Anima makes the argument pretty hard.

The Evil Inside 2 psychological terrors are intensified, meaning gamers are never sure if what they see will destroy them. The chance is pretty high in most cases.

6. Until Dawn

Until Dawn

From the makers of Start the Party! Save the World, and LittleBigPlanet comes Until Dawn, a horror survival game set in the Blackwood Mountains.

That is quite a change of tone for Supermassive Games, but the developer has a little problem finding a home in the horror genre.

The “butterfly effect” method is its greatest feat, where each option later on is a consequence.

Sure, it is not the newest idea, but in Until Dawn, it is a bit more complex than in many other games.

The romp in the icy mountains of Supermassive Games has everything you might expect from a true-to-form survival horror game.

Plenty of gore, jump scares, mystery characters, over-the-top scenes of death, and an unforeseen twist changes the game entirely.

7. Amnesia: Rebirth

Amnesia: Rebirth

Outlast may take most of the credit, but the Amnesia series mostly spearheaded the “helpless protagonist” theme. Well, it is back again, this time in Amnesia: Rebirth.

Players embark on a frightening journey of exploration as the character “Tasi Trianon.”

The storyline is riddled with more questions than answers. Algeria’s desert is home to horrific monsters, and all of them want to feed on your ever-growing fear.

You have nothing but your fast feet and the ability to hide to save you from a horrible fate, similar to the previous installments.

Scour for resources, tackle difficult puzzles, and, most notably, in this terrifying first-person adventure, run for cover.

Live long enough, and you may discover what caused Trianon to land in the middle of the desert with little recollection of their past.

8. Alien: Isolation

Alien: Isolation

Murderous androids or a dangerous band of survivors stand in your path as you approach your next target.

This is life for Amanda Ripley aboard Sevastopol Station, and it is all complicated by the presence of the greatest terror of all: a lanky xenomorph on the search for blood.

Alien: Isolation recaptures the tense pace of Ridley Scott’s original sci-fi horror and is the first game in the series to trade enormous weaponry for gadgets and noisemakers.

Since the Xeno is an unbeatable force, a pulse rifle will not help you here, which further raises the fears of Creative Assembly’s entry in the Alien series.

9. Outlast 2

After the original Outlast frightened gamers with a surprisingly simple idea, there was no doubt a sequel would appear.

Red Barrels did not disappoint when they sent players to the Supai area of Arizona, again fitted with only night vision and a video camera.

In the same setting of a decrepit asylum, Outlast 2 trades for a secluded village but is still set in the same universe.

Outlast 2 has strong religious overtones further play into the isolated village’s general creep factor.

Although Outlast focused more on in-your-face horror, it is easier to create anticipation for Outlast 2.

In the end, you spend a lot of time anticipating the worst, leading to a more tense experience that holds you on edge.

10. Resident Evil 7

Resident Evil 7

There are two distinct reasons why this list of the best PS4 horror games contains Resident Evil 7.

To start with, it was the first game in the series to have a real sense of atmosphere, after the first two games.

Second, playing it with a PSVR headset will cause you to feel terror at an entirely new level.

Okay, maybe it is not that scary. Still, the horror of survival and virtual reality go better together than we would anticipate, and Resident Evil 7 is a prime example of how they are combined.

While many criticized Resident 7 for deviating so much from the original series, the fresher notes make it such a great game.

The new setting, characters, and story give the series the overhaul it needs.

11. Resident Evil 2 (Remake)

Resident Evil 2 (Remake)

The remake of Resident Evil 2 gets twice the acclaim as we sang for Resident Evil 7.

Capcom went back to the drawing board instead of just slapping fresh new graphics on the 1998 sequel, using the RE Engine to create a game that looks and sounds phenomenal.

In the setting of the museum-turned-police station, the wonderfully gruesome visuals and impressive use of sound design immerse players and keep them glued to their screens.

Although the plot remains relatively unchanged and we don’t quite get the same “A and B” scenarios, Resident Evil 2 Remake expertly captures what we enjoyed about the original.

Nostalgia aside, for newcomers to the Resident Evil franchise, the remake is also a well-rounded horror title with a worthy introduction to one of the series’ best cast of characters, if not the best.

12. The Last of Us 2

The Last of Us is among the few games of the last decade that not only didn’t claim a sequel but seemed to consciously reject the possibility of one.

Due to its self-contained nature, the tale is largely poignant: not understanding what happened between Joel and Ellie after his fateful, final decision burned a mark into the minds of those who played it, and the open-ended problem has endured for years.

However, with The Last of Us Part 2, the developer Naughty Dog has risen to the challenge.

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