'90s Dark Web Game is Scarier Than I Thought

'90s Dark Web Game is Scarier Than I Thought

🟣 Content Overview :
  • darkwebSTREAMER blends horror and sim elements into an enthralling experience.
  • The game's risk-reward system involves streaming dangerous occult activities.
  • Each death inspires further attempts to learn about the game's monsters.
  • The core loop revolves around hosting live streams for viewers.
  • Encounters during streams involve skill checks affecting health and sanity.

Streamers Visuals

Discover

Home

Latest

News

Guides

Reviews

Games

Culture

Opinion

Anime

The Bests

Editions

Español

Deutsch

Français

More

Log In

Sign Up

Send us a Tip

Shop

Subscribe

Extra

About

Streamers Visuals

Store

Advertising

Privacy

Jobs

Terms of Use

Explore our other sites

Jalopnik

Quartz

The Root

The Inventory

2024 GO Media

We may earn a commission from links on this page

Impressions: 90s Dark Web Streaming Sim Is Way More Terrifying Than I Expected

DarkwebSTREAMER blends horror and sim elements into an enthralling experience that's hard to put down.

By Willa Rowe

Published Monday 1:40 PM

We may earn a commission from links on this page

A pair of eyes stare intensely at the camera

Image We Have Always Lived In The Forest

Of the seven demos I played at the Tribeca Festival's official games section, darkwebSTREAMER is by far the one I spent the most time with.

The horror narrative roguelike's risk-reward system, based around streaming progressively more dangerous occult activities in hopes of becoming the best streamer you can be, hooked me immediately.

Suggested Reading

  • Twitch Pulls Shooting Vid Quickly But Facebook And Streamable Reuploads Reached Millions
  • Pokimane's Immaculate Room Tour Has Twitch Streamers Showing Off Their Messy Bedrooms
  • Ludwig's Never-Ending Twitch Stream Has Ended
  • Streamers Visuals' Hopes For Spyro The Dragon's Reported Comeback

Each death inspired me to try to get a little further, learn a little more about the game's monsters, and gain a few more subscribers on my channel.

DarkwebSTREAMER's gameplay loop just feels so good and I want more of its occult internet.

Advertisement

RELATED CONTENT

  • Twitch's Hot Tub Meta Has Sparked Off Yet Another Debate About Women's Attire
  • Livestream Of Boulder Mass Shooting Raises Questions About What YouTube And Twitch Should Allow

The core loop of darkwebSTREAMER revolves around hosting live streams for your viewers.

To host a stream, you need something interesting to stream about—in my demo, that came in the form of many different haunted dolls.

Once you begin the stream, your viewers will shuffle in and comment on whatever you have going on.

The roguelike nature begins to show itself in these streams as your character has a stat list that will be challenged.

To win over my crowd, I decided it would be a good idea to do a silly voice for the haunted doll, hoping my audience would find me utterly hilarious.

I failed a performance check and they all laughed at me instead of with me.

Viewers started leaving.

But after each skill check, you are offered a choice: end the stream or keep going.

Advertisement

A blog page shows the player and their about me section

Image We Have Always Lived In The Forest

At first, the answer seems pretty obvious—just keep streaming as that's the best way to gain new subscribers who might then donate money.

But then the horror parts of darkwebSTREAMER show up.

When I kept going, I encountered things like clawing at my door, my viewers getting freaked out in chat and saying they saw a phantom, and receiving an envelope filled with mysterious worm-like creatures.

These encounters involve more skill checks and beyond losing subscribers, failing them can lessen your health or your sanity.

The immediate comparison I made was to TTRPG Call of Cthulhu, and in many ways darkwebSTREAMER's combination of stats and responsive narrative feel inspired by tabletop games.

Eventually, if you push yourself far enough, you will exhaust yourself and must end the stream.

But that's not the end of the gameplay loop.

DarkwebSTREAMER takes place in a simulated web browser and once a stream is over, you can surf the web to find new sites, some offering items to buy that you can use for your streams.

Most of these sites feature unsettling writing and rather shockingly, beyond essential storefront sites, these are all procedurally generated by putting together building blocks of text and art created by developer Chantal Ryan, who pored over old internet sites like Geocities to get the tone just right.

And she succeeded as those sites capture the vibe of the 90s internet so well that I found myself going over every word and illustration in case it was a hint I needed.

It speaks to how well the game's world is realized through a simple monochromatic interface and well-written text.

Advertisement

It may look like just a computer screen, but the world beyond it is tangible.

When you shut down the game's computer to rest for the night, the horror creeps even closer.

Every time I tried to sleep, something would wake me up.

Once time it was just a kitten in the hallway, but on another occasion, I sensed a presence in the kitchen threatening my sanity.

A spooky blog page shows two people with sheets over their heads kissing

Image We Have Always Lived In The Forest

Whether you choose to avoid or investigate these threats that don't live within the game's computer screen, it feels like a threshold is being transgressed.

This, along with the rest of the game's horror, feeds on our inherent fear of what goes bump in the night.

Even while playing it in a secluded room in the middle of the day, I found myself getting goosebumps and fighting the urge to check behind me.

The streaming system itself feeds into the game's unsettling vibe as it encourages you to put yourself in bad situations.

While everyone always says they wouldn't act like a stupid horror movie character if they were in the same situation, darkwebSTREAMER proves the contrary.

Because of my morbid fascination with the game's horror, I continued to stream because I simply needed to satisfy my curiosity.

It often led to my death, but watching the in-game chat become equally intrigued with what could happen to me—and often subscribing and donating to encourage and support my reckless behavior—made me think it was all worth it.

It's a not-so-subtle commentary on our morbid fascination with seeing others put themselves in harm's way and on the voyeuristic nature of streaming.

And in darkwebSTREAMER, it also happens to be incredibly fun.

Advertisement

Continue reading.

  • МГНОВЕННАЯ ЗАГРУЗКА

    Безопасно, надежно и быстро! Оплачивайте и скачивайте мгновенно.

  • +9000 УДОВЛЕТВОРЕННЫХ КЛИЕНТОВ

    Присоединяйтесь к нашему глобальному сообществу довольных и надежных клиентов!

  • RISK-FREE RETURNS

    Покупайте с уверенностью, мы предлагаем легкий и безрисковый возврат!

  • 24/7 КЛИЕНТСКАЯ СЛУЖБА

    Вы никогда не останетесь одни с нашей службой поддержки! Нажмите здесь, чтобы получить немедленную помощь.