Fixed | Horrornauta
Final call: A solid, memorable dive — just don’t expect deep waters.
Wear headphones. The underwater thuds, distant whale-like calls, and sudden silence before an attack are superb. Audio cues are your main source of information, and the game uses them cleverly. The Mixed / The Bad 1. Shallow Long-Term Depth After the first hour, the core loop — sonar sweep → move → repair → repeat — starts to feel repetitive. There are only a few mission types (collect samples, reach depth, survive waves). The game is short (2–3 hours), which is fine, but within that runtime, it could use more variety in objectives or ship upgrades. horrornauta
The entity (or entities) isn’t a simple scripted monster. Its behavior changes across playthroughs. Sometimes it’s passive, other times aggressive. This keeps replays fresh and encourages paranoia. The game also includes a few genuinely shocking, scripted moments that break the routine. Final call: A solid, memorable dive — just
Here’s a solid, balanced review of (the indie horror game by Claudio Norori and Sebastián López , often compared to Iron Lung and Duskers ). Review: Horrornauta – Tense, Claustrophobic, but Not Without Faults Rating: 7.5/10 Recommended for: Fans of minimalist, interface-driven horror, resource management, and Lovecraftian dread. The Good 1. Exceptional Atmosphere Horrornauta nails its oppressive, suffocating tone. You’re alone in a leaking, barely-functional submarine in an alien ocean. The low-fi CRT monitor aesthetic, grainy sonar sweeps, and ambient creaks of metal under pressure create a constant sense of vulnerability. It’s a masterclass in less is more . Audio cues are your main source of information,
Some stretches are genuinely tense; others involve waiting in real-time for sonar cooldowns or repairs with nothing happening. While this is intentional (to mimic real isolation), it can drag for players seeking constant action. A “fast-forward” option for safe moments would help.