Korean Games For Mac

When it comes to the Korean War (1950-53) the shortage of games that I complained about here previously persists. Unlike World War II, the Korean War simply hasn’t been a popular setting for games or film. The reasons for this are open to speculation; my own view is that it’s much tougher to map the sides of the conflict onto simplified notions of 'good guys' and 'bad guys,' and that the west runs into difficult moral territory when we start talking about how the fighting came to a provisional close. Korea was a difficult, brutal, and depressing war, and the lack of a clear-cut resolution makes it unattractive as a source of American myth-creation.

All that to say this: I’ve decided to cheat heavily in creating this list. The selection of actual Korean War games is small enough that it’s hard enough to even create a list of them that are playable on modern machines, much less a list of 'the best' of those. Therefore, I’m expanding my scope to include a few categories that wouldn’t otherwise be considered. These are:

  • Games about the Cold War, as long as these actually include the Korean War somehow, and
  • Korean War mods and user-created scenarios for relatively well-known strategy and wargames.
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Preliminary throat-clearing out of the way, it’s time to strap in. We’re in for a bumpy ride.

Korean Games For Mac Free

What are the best Korean War Games?

R/gaming: A subreddit for (almost) anything related to games - video games, board games, card games, etc. (but not sports). Press J to jump to the feed. Press question mark to learn the rest of the keyboard shortcuts. Does anyone know how to download this Korean game called 'Crazy Arcade'? Your comment helped out a lot lol but so bummed.

  • Theatre of War 3: Korea
  • MiG Alley
  • John Tiller's Squad Battles - The Korean War
  • Steel Panthers II: Modern Battles
  • Steel Panthers: MacArthur's War: Battles for Korea
  • Twilight Struggle

Theatre of War 3: Korea

Publisher: 1C Company
Released: March 24, 2011
Tags: Strategy, Cold War, RTS
Purchase:Steam

Right away, I’ll have to qualify my recommendation here. While 1C Company has made some very nearly excellent real-time strategy wargames - particularly the Assault Squad series - Theatre of War 3 can’t honestly be counted among the best of them. AI ranges from fiddly to terrible, the “dynamic” campaigns aren’t actually very interesting, and it’s riddled with the jankiness that even newer 1C titles haven’t been able to rid themselves of completely.

That said, Theatre of War 3 provides one of the vanishingly few dedicated, out-of-the-box Korean War strategy experiences available, and it added some key innovations to the 1C formula. The campaigns were non-linear and changed based on your performance and decisions, and it adopted a more squad-focused control scheme, saving you from having to manage each individual soldier as in the first Men of War. Theatre of War 3 also adds some of the important new hardware of the time, like transport helicopters, new artillery pieces, and jets. I’ve been particularly impressed with the terrain, which features steep Korean mountain ranges and rural architecture that set it apart from 1C’s WWII games.

You’ll have to be pretty forgiving with this one, particularly if you’ve gotten used to the new-fangled conveniences of Assault Squad 2, but as Korean War games go, this is one of the most focused and modern, sadly enough.

MiG Alley

Publisher: Empire Interactive
Released: November 30, 1999
Tags: Flight sim, Korean War
Purchase: Used CD-ROM, via Amazon

The late ‘90s saw several ambitious flight sims take on the Korean War: Virgin Group’s Sabre Ace: Conflict Over Korea and Rowan Software’s response, MiG Alley two years later. It was the latter game that really shone, though, with a healthy selection of aircraft, a very good flight model for its time, and not one but five dynamic campaigns. While the first four had you flying pre-planned scenarios, the fifth campaign depicts the 1951 Spring Offensive, and gives you operational control of more than a hundred aircraft involved.

In terms of roster, MiG Alley was pretty generous: you had the F-84 Thunder jet, several variants of the F-86 Sabre, the P-51 Mustang, F-80 Shooting Star, and a couple MiG-15 variants as well. They all felt distinct in the air, too, thanks to the game’s attention to detail on the individual aircraft flight models.

MiG Alley came out back when it was normal to pack 100+ page instruction manuals with flight simulators, and Rowan went the extra mile by further including not only a keyboard overlay and a booklet solely dedicated to explaining the difference between the F-86 and the MiG-15, but also a paper reproduction of an actual 1952 RAF briefing sheet.

Unfortunately, despite glowing critical reviews, MiG Alley sold abysmally. Empire Interactive shut down Rowan Software in 2001, but the source code was released so that the player community could keep updating the game. The license for the source didn’t include textures or terrain details, but you can find the rest of it over on GitHub.

John Tiller's Squad Battles - The Korean War

Publisher: John Tiller Software
Released: No date provided
Tags: Turn-based strategy, classic wargame
Purchase:Direct

Given his prodigious output and accompanying stature in the wargaming space, John Tiller’s games represent a glaring gap in my gaming history. Tiller has covered the Napoleonics to modern conflicts like the 1985 Fulda Gap and everything in between, so it should come as no surprise that he’s found time for an entry devoted to the Korean War.

Squad Battles: The Korean War uses an older version of Tiller’s 40-meter hex system for turn-based battles focused on individual fireteams of five soldiers, and it includes three separate campaigns that span a total of 70 scenarios designed by “Wild” Bill Wilder. These cover the full shooting war period from 1950 to the 1953 ceasefire, and it includes units from Australia, Britain, Canada, China, and Turkey along with the United States, South Korea, and North Korea.

Tiller’s games are in the classic wargame style and have very little in the way of modern frills. But they’re surprisingly accessible and simple to pick up and play, while still affording enough room for a healthy level of tactical depth. The campaigns follow individual officers and their units as they’re carried along in the see-saw fighting back and forth across the 38th Parallel, and while the presentation is a bit Spartan, Tiller Software provides additional color with historical flavor text and a wide variety of accurate missions.

Tiller returned to the Korean peninsula for a hypothetical modern conflict with Korea '85.

Steel Panthers II: Modern Battles

Publisher: Mindscape Inc.
Released: 1996
Tags: Turn-based, top down, historic
Purchase: The free and enhanced version, winSPMBT is available from ShrapnelGames

I regret the fact that I missed out on the Steel Panthers games back when they were fresh - my interest in tanks around that time was largely eaten up by a ridiculous little sci-fi game called Command & Conquer. But even though I skipped over SSI’s hex-based armor classics at the time, their influence can still be felt today. Matrix Games bought the rights to Steel Panthers and released Steel Panthers: World at War in 2000, and the Strategic Simulations DNA runs through modern titles like Order of Battle.

Steel Panthers II: Modern Battles covers 20th century conflict from 1950-2000, and it includes several Korean War scenarios. The Battle of Chongju is represented, there are two scenarios for the Battle of Chosin, and one each for Pork Chop Hill and Bunker Hill.

For games that are now old enough to order their own cocktails, the Steel Panther games hold up surprisingly well, provided you’re willing to put up with the process of getting them running on DOSBox or a similar emulator.

Since this article was first published, I've been made aware of winSPMBT, a complete overhaul of a massive modding project for Steel Panthers II called Steel Panthers: Main Battle Tank.Originally a standalone DOS application, winSPMBT updates the game for Windows environments (including supporting resolutions higher than 640x480), adds several new scenarios and a new campaign, and even reworks several game mechanics. Best part? It's free to download, and you don't need any additional software to run it.

Steel Panthers: MacArthur's War: Battles for Korea

Publisher: Strategic Studies Group
Released: 1988
Tags: Top down, turn based, historic
Purchase: Play for free at Archive.org

This one is notable for its wildly ambitious scope way back in 1988 - imagine, thirty years ago, the hardware we had available and the moxie it would have taken to try to make a fully-functioning tabletop wargame work on that. MacArthur’s War: Battles for Korea pretty much pulls it off, recreating the cardboard counters and colorful maps of tabletop wargaming for Commodore 64.

I didn’t play this at the time, since I was eight years old and was still trying to figure out how to play the dreadful Ghostbusters game that appeared on the Atari 2600. But fortunately, MacArthur’s War has been saved and made available by the Internet Archive, and you can play it right in your web browser, free of charge.

I’ll confess I haven’t had much luck with it - I haven’t been able to turn up the original documentation, and the tinyscreen resolutions and dinky RAM chips of the era made abbreviations vital. That means it’s pretty tough to decipher what your commands are, or how things like turn order and combat resolution work.

But just looking at the thing as a wargamer three full decades later, it’s impossible not to be impressed by MacArthur’s War, mysterious as it is. Units are grouped into historic regiments, you have accurate military symbols for infantry and armor divisions, and several historic scenarios to choose from. It’s tremendously advanced for its time, and I’m keen to keep poking at it until I can figure out how it works.

Twilight Struggle

Publisher: Asmodee Digital
Released: April 13, 2016
Tags: Board game, strategy, simulation, Cold War
Purchase:Steam, Mobile, or the tabletop version via Amazon

The Korean War was a bloody, horrible three-year conflict, but it wound up being just one of the many proxy wars that erupted at friction points between the two global superpowers who found themselves locked in the Cold War for most of the second half of the twentieth century. Twilight Struggle is a game about the nightmarishly complex web of relationships and the razor-thin balance that existed between the U.S.-led West and the U.S.S.R., and while very little of it deals with the Korean War as a conflict, it’s a fantastic game that provides some valuable context.

The best way to play Twilight Struggle is with a friend, on a tabletop, but with the tabletop retailing for more than $100, the more affordable Steam version (or the even more affordable tablet version) might be a good way to see if it’s up your alley. Fighter jet games for mac. The digital version also serves as a perfect way to learn the game, and you’ll be able to drop straight into the traditional experience once you’ve played a couple games on the computer.

There’s little I could add to what Matt Thrower has already written on Twilight Struggle, so I’ll point you to his glowing review here at The Wargamer, and to his discussion about the game with Shut Up & Sit Down’s Quentin Smith. As Twilight Struggle is Matt’s favorite game, he’s welcome to do the heavy lifting on explaining how it works and why it’s good. But one element of Twilight Struggle that Matt highlights in both pieces is the game’s card draught system, which I think is relevant here. Both players draw cards and conceal them from each other, making Twilight Struggle a game about asymmetric information. That’s something that traditional wargames don’t often do very well, but it’s arguably the most important driving element of the Cold War and abstracting it to a simple mechanic like a hand of cards is very clever indeed.

User-created mods and scenarios

In the interest of time and space, I’ll go quickly through a few Korean War mods and scenarios available. Several total conversion projects focused on the Korean War have launched, but most of these have petered out before releasing a final version. But there are enough bits and pieces out there to get started. It all depends on what you want to accomplish.

If you own The Operational Art of War IV (review), you’ve got Korea as the setting for its starter scenario. It takes some doing, but scenarios built for previous TOAW titles, as well as Alternate Wars, can be converted to work in the latest software. Matrix forums user CaptainKoloth found an Alternate Wars Operation Chromite scenario, recreating the landing at Incheon, and updated it for TOAW4, which you can find here. It’s included in a massive pack of 415 old scenarios converted for use in TOAW3 available from The Operational Art of War Legacy Project, courtesy of Matrix forum user Ryan Crierie.

You can also pick up a Korean War scenario by the creator of The Operational Art of War himself, Norm Koger. He published his Korea 50-51 scenario in 2002, and it's a 52-turn (one full year) battle between 239 Communist units and 174 United Nations forces. Koger built several interesting triggers into the scenario - for instance, if the UN drops airborne troops into either Soviet or Chinese territory, those countries will opt to intervene in Korea. 'Korean winters are harsh,' he adds in the description. 'Be prepared.' I can personally attest to the accuracy of this statement.

For John Tiller’s Campaign Series, forums veteran Mike “Warhorse” Amos has a Korean War mod that he’s been updating for years, now in version 2.02. You can find the download link in this post.

There are several Korean War mods for the Men of War series,but they’re all a bit half-baked in one way or another. You can try Korean War 1950-1953 for the original Men of War, or Korea 1953 v.0.9 for Assault Squad 2. Korea war (the Forgotten war) [sic] for Assault Squad has gotten a little attention on YouTube, but there’s very little to it and the project hasn’t been updated since 2012.

ArmA 3 players are in pretty good shape here. There’s the Korean War mod by JackAttackJRMV. Right now, it’s just adding U.S. Marines and North Korean Army factions and vehicles to the game, but he has a host of additional features on the 'planned' list, including ROK forces, PRC forces, a new map, plus the MiG-15 and F-86 fighters. Jack recommends installing the Korean War Factions mod by jarrad96, which adds period-accurate uniforms and gear. Both these mods require subscribing to several others in the Steam Workshop, but Steam will give you a handy list of links to go through whenever you’re missing any required components. Of course, if you’re just browsing and don’t feel like installing several gigabytes worth of mods, you can use the Get to da Choppa mod (requires Apex) and pop on the theme from M*A*S*H while you fly around Altis in a Bell 47.

And that about wraps things up for our list of Korean War games. Researching this piece, I found that other writers have been complaining about the lack of games - of any genre - dealing with the Korean War for the full 30 years represented here, and the situation is unlikely to change any time soon.

Reader Recommendations

If you have a favorite Korean War game, mod, or scenario that we've missed, please be sure to let us know in the comments.

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Japanese and Korean horror movies take the fear factor to a whole new level. I am sure most of you will agree with me. Even the games are pretty creepy.

There are also quite a few PC and PS2 horror games you must try out. But if you are a mobile gamer, then there’s some good news for you – There are several short, but scary Korean and Japanese horror games available for Android, but unfortunately most of them are not in English.

Mac

In times like this, we wish we could know how to read Kanji and Hangul. Most of these games have simple touch-based controls and you don’t need to learn both languages to play.

Some of these games are hard to find, but don’t worry we have done the hard work and selected the scariest games for you. For the TL;DR crowd, watch our video below to know which are the top K-horror and J-horror games for Android:

1. The Jusou

The Jusou’s disturbing visuals will surely make you feel sad, frightened and a bit depressed. In this point-and-click J-horror game, you will be exploring a haunted house soon after realizing that someone’s inside.

As you explore each room, you will have to solve puzzles to know the reason behind the disappearance of all members of a family.

There are several jump scare moments and they get triggered once you solve puzzles in each room. There’s also a phone mode where you can attend a call of a ghost.

The ghost’s voice is very terrifying, and you may even have to put down your headphones because the weird noises and screams can become pretty unbearable. The game’s visuals and story is inspired by Japanese horror movies like Ju-On The Grudge.

Puzzles are easy to solve and there’s a hint system that lets you solve one, but for that you will have to spend coins.

Coins are scattered everywhere and hidden in every nook and corner of house. And if you are too lazy to explore the house for coins, then there’s always the watch advert option that lets you see a 30-sec video to earn a coin.

The game’s unique graphics combine black-and-white static graphics with colored object. The red shoes room spooked me out, so did the child’s room. The game has a pretty scary ending. Certainly not for the faint-hearted.

2. Curse of the Exorcist

Curse of the Exorcist takes you to a decaying room of a very creepy abandoned building. Armed with a flashlight and holy water, you are tasked to exorcise cursed souls.

The ghosts are downright frightening and appear out of everywhere, including drawers, a garbage bag and a cupboard. When you spot one, tap the screen rapidly to sprinkle holy water on a ghost before it attacks you.

For every ghost you exorcise, you will get points and they can be earned by swiping its remains stuck on the screen. A new ghost appears once you reach a score target. Tap the button at the bottom of the screen after reaching a score target if you have the galls to face a new ghost.

Things become extremely difficult once you unlock more than five ghosts. They keep appearing randomly and you will have to be very quick to get rid of them.

Ghosts come in different shapes and sizes, and most of them are inspired by popular urban legends and J-horror movies. There are baby ghosts, scary school-goers, a spooky entity in a rabbit costume and many more.

Everything’s very creepy and you never know when they will appear and spook you out. A ghost encyclopedia displays a list of ghosts that you have unlocked so far.

Tap a ghost icon to know more about it. The info screen shows the points you will earn after exorcising that ghost and the amount of holy water required to exorcise it.

At first the game does well in scaring players, but things may get frustratingly boring when unlocked ghosts keep appearing one after the other, making it very hard to exorcise them. All in all, Curse of the Exorcist is a good game and should be played after dark.

3. Ao Oni 2

The dreaded blue monster is back! And this time he is in an abandoned school searching for his next prey. The sequel to the super scary Ao Oni takes players to a haunted school that was suddenly shut down on rumors of a “blue demon” surfaces in the building.

The game starts with you and your curious friends investigating an abandoned school. While you investigate, your friends disappear and one runs away terrified after seeing the blue demon. Now it’s all up to you to find the key and escape before Ao Oni stalks and kills you.

The game has a typical top-down graphics and chibi characters. Old-school visuals remind me of popular Asian horror games like Hide & Seek and Owl Head.

There are several logic-based puzzles to keep you busy for hours. When you spot the blue demon, make sure you flee from the scene, else it’s game over. Ao Oni 2 is very scary and not easy to play. You can get it for free on the Google Play Store.

4. 1994 Escape from the School

Escape from the School scared the bejesus outta me. Guess what? I played it at daytime and it still gave me the chills.

I can’t imagine how scared I would have been had I played this game after dark, with the lights off and headphones on.

The game is at its scariest best when you put on your earphones. It’s the spooky ambience and the sound effects that play an important role in making this game super scary.

1994 Escape from the School is a room escape type of a game. The 3D game’s haunted school setting is very reminiscent of high school J-horror movie.

The infirmary, girls and boys toilets, music room and class room models are eerily similar to an abandoned Japanese school as seen in movies. There are puzzles and clues scattered all around the haunted school and you will have to solve them to escape it.

The game has no story, but there’s a warning scribbled on the green board which says to keep a safe distance from a teddy bear.

There’s also a mysterious girl who keeps appearing in some locations. 1994 is one of the best room escape games I have played and there’s also a sequel called Re: 1994 Escape Again. Do check out that game for more jump scare moments, but after you finish playing the first game.

5. Found!

Found! is a creepy Japanese horror game where hiding from an Onryo is almost impossible. In this game, you will have to tap and hold the face of a trembling girl wrapped in sheets to wrap herself completely from a wandering ghost.

When you tap, she will pull the blanket over her head. You will have to do this before the ghost appears on the screen.

The objective of this game is to hide the girl in a blanket for a long time without being spotted by a wandering ghost.

The timer at the top-left corner of the screen is actually your score. The longer you avoid being spotted by the scary Onryo, the better the score will be and the higher you will rank at the online leaderboard. Plus there are some souvenirs you can earn at the end.

However, the girl can hide herself for a few seconds and will show her face once the meter to your right goes down. And if the ghost appears the moment she shows her face, its game over.

You will have to decide when is the right time to hide or bring her out of her blanket. What you can do is lift your finger up immediately after the ghost leaves the room to recharge the meter so that you can allow her to hide for few more seconds after the ghost reappears.

The vengeful ghost is clever and will find different ways to enter the room. She will peek from a hidden trapdoor, appear inside a pendulum clock, hang from the ceiling and glide from one corner of the room to another. She has various tricks up her sleeve and you will have to be vigilant to not let her succeed in finding the girl.

The game’s fun and the Onryo, and its various forms, is extremely frightening. Download Found! if you love hide-and-seek type of horror games.

6. Hide and Seek: Story of Dorothy

Hide and Seek: Story of Dorothy is a Korean horror RPG game from TabomSoft. Possibly created using RPG Maker, Story of Dorothy revolves around a young girl who dozed off in a closet while playing hide and seek with her friends.

When she woke up, she couldn’t find anyone and began exploring the mansion. You will have to help her explore each room, solve puzzles and discover clues to know what’s happening in the haunted mansion.

There are also numerous traps and puzzles galore, including a spiky room trap, a chess puzzle, a logic-based monkey puzzle, a strange room with plenty of scary toys and many more.

The spiky room trap is right there in the first room at the start of play. So think twice before opening something or examining an item and do save the game regularly as you will die several times in the game.

There are several inventory-based puzzles. You will need to use the items that you have collected while exploring the mansion

The game has a very intriguing storyline and three endings, including a good ending and bad ending. The third ending is the toughest to unlock.

The 2D visuals are reminiscent of old school Japanese role-playing games. The ominous background music maintains the suspense and creates a scary atmosphere. Hide and Seek: Story of Dorothy is free and can be downloaded from the Google Play store.

7. Hide and Seek: Stranger

The sequel to The Story of Dorothy is more frightening and the puzzles are harder than the first game.

In the beginning, you will play the story of Gwyn and later you will be able to unlock two more story modes, each as challenging and intriguing as the other. The story takes place in Dorothy’s haunted mansion, where there’s a hidden treasure, but the protagonist is as much interested about his ancestors as the treasure.

The game has multiple endings, and this time the developers have added in-app purchases that will help you solve puzzles quickly and reach the game’s true ending. You will also have to craft keys and for that you will have to search for materials to create them.

There are some devious traps scattered all around the mansion so I would suggest saving the game as soon as possible. There are spooky statues where you can save the game and later continue from where you left by loading save states.

8. 3D Kimodameshi

3D Kimodameshi is a pretty creepy Japanese Android game. It provides a true J-horror movie style atmosphere in full 360-degree. Using simple touch-based controls you can explore and look around an abandoned house in first-person perspective to unearth its secrets.

There’s no tapping involved as events are triggered when you get closer to certain objects.

The handy hint button (eye icon) can be very useful if you don’t know what to do next. It tells you which are the items of interest and you will have to move closer to them to trigger events that will certainly scare the daylights out of you.

Note: Best way to experience 3D Kimodameshi is to play it with your headphones on.

9. Owl Head

Another excellent horror adventure game, Owl Head has an eerie haunted mansion setting. You will follow the adventure of a teenager and his friends who decide to explore an abandoned mansion. Taking it as a challenge, the protagonist and his friends enter the dilapidated building.

The game starts when they get inside the mansion and all kids, except the main character mysteriously disappear without leaving a trace.

Your objective is to search for them and explore the mansion for clues and secrets. As soon as you start exploring, a weird-looking Owl mask-wearing guy will start stalking your character.

You will have to run away from him and hide your character inside tables or in a closet in one of the multiple rooms or find a way to get rid of the “Owl Head”.

The mansion has plenty of rooms and some of them contain clues. Owl Head may appear randomly on any of the rooms or when the protagonist finds some clue in one the rooms.

Your character can die anytime, so make sure you keep saving the game at regular intervals. Tap the back button on your Android device at the bottom of the screen to open a menu.

This menu contains a section where you save your progress.

Owl Head is another game made using RPG-Maker and has lovely 2D visuals. If you loved Playing Hide and Seek: Dorothy and Stranger, then you should play this game.

10. Asylum

Tabomsoft has done it again. The Korean developer has created yet another terrifying game for horror fanatics.

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Asylum is a nightmare-fuel game that puts you into the shoes of a patient suffering from a mental disorder.

After a horrific dream about a murdered patient, the protagonist wakes up only to find herself in the same ward just like the patient was in her dream. A knock on the door sends chills down her spine and you will have to help her escape before the killer does his job.

Asylum plays like a never-ending dream as you move from one ward to another to escape death. There are multiple endings, several grotesque monsters and deadly traps that will instantly kill you if you make one wrong more.

What’s the mystery of this dilapidated mental institution? Why secret does the building hide? This and many more mysteries are waiting to be unraveled in Asylum.

11. Evolution Japan Doll of Grudge

In this weird little game you will have to raise a cute looking cursed doll. But the adorable doll won’t remain cute for long. What appears to be a harmless looking inanimate object will soon turn into something grotesque as you keep evolving it.

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As you keep tapping snakes, giant rats and centipedes, the doll starts attacking them. You earn points for every creature squished by the doll.

Korean Games For Mac 2017

Once the score meter fills completely, the doll changes form. Every time your doll evolves, she appears more hideous than her previous avatar. Her attack style also changes.

In one scary form, she crushed creatures with her hair. Creatures will keep appearing over time, and you will have to wait for a few seconds before you can start tapping to earn points and soft drink caps.

Collect and trade these caps for a perk, which you can get by tapping the first button on your left hand side.

Evolution Japan Doll of Grudge has nice hand-drawn graphics. The doll looks extremely frightening in its various forms. It’s a virtual pet type of a game, but with a scary twist.

12. Dark Corridors 2

Dark Corridors 2 is a horror endless runner. The game has a creepy story which unlocks page-by-page as you keep completing mission objectives.

You control a school student as she runs along a dark corridor, possibly escaping from a scary long-haired apparition. The ghost follows her and gets right behind her when she trips over an obstacle.

She also appears when you swipe the screen to move her instead of tilting. You should swipe the screen left or right only when you spot a corner. Don’t swipe unnecessarily or else the ghost will keep following her for a few minutes before she vanishes.

There are various obstacles that will force you to jump, slide or just tilt your device to avoid dashing into them.

The game switches from the school corridors to a scarier location, such as a dilapidated bridge. Once you complete a set of mission objectives, a part of the full story unlocks.

You can read it by tapping the “Read Stories” button on the home screen. There are 3 unlockable characters.

Each character has a different story to tell, which you can unlock by completing their story missions. If you really want to enjoy Dark Corridors 2, then you should put on your headphones and play it.

13. Ellie: Help Me Out Please

Ellie: Help Me Out Please is a Japanese room escape game with puzzle elements. Developed by A-team, this short but scary game challenges you to help a poor girl escape from the clutches of her kidnapper. You only have an old TV with which you can monitor her movements.

There are only two CC TV cameras installed on the room where Ellie is trapped. You will have to switch between cameras to look for clues.

You will have to tap on clues to get more info and solve numeric and inventory-based puzzles.

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The game has two endings: A nice and a dark one. There’s a twist in the second ending, so make sure you unlock both endings for a surprise.

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