Friendslop is ruining horror games and I’m tired of it

results of the more emotes mod in lethal company

I’ve had it. YAPYAP has pushed me over the edge. Friendslop is running rampant in the indie horror sphere, spreading with no sign of stopping.

I was never one to jump on the friendslop bandwagon or refer to games of its kind in this derogatory way, but there’s been a recent and quite drastic shift in indie horror games that I can no longer ignore. And sadly, it’s thanks to Lethal Company.

A fan of horror games since adolescence, I started paying attention to the indie side because of PewDiePie’s Amnesia: The Dark Descent Let’s Play. Oh, things were far simpler back in 2010. Amnesia was just the start, Five Nights at Freddy’s followed, and many have since come and gone, but the virality of a game has grown more and more important in recent years.

Released back in October 2023, Lethal Company paved the way for many to come as a delightful and highly entertaining co-op title that was both as creepy as it was hilarious. It soared to stardom on YouTube and Twitch, and had its moment in the spotlight with every update until the Company Cruiser got added in July 2024. Yet, Zeekerss’s fantastic horror game with clever AI and eerie ambience has since been replaced by the challenging R.E.P.O. Unlike its competitors, R.E.P.O. held onto a strong identity even with similarities to LC. But it was the likeable and adorable semibots and the psychics-based mechanics (plus frequent updates) that pushed it into the top spot.

It’s similar to what came of the cancelled Silent Hills project titled, P.T. Many, including games you’ve likely heard of and played (e.g., Layers of Fear and VISAGE) were directly inspired by a demo that singlehandedly created a subgenre of horror. But the problem with a pioneer is how oversaturated the market becomes following a new idea. Creators latch onto a popular idea as if it’s their lifeline.

While SCP: Containment Breach offered full player autonomy, scary monsters, engaging level design, and multiple endings, the influx of recent co-op horrors does nothing of the sort. Titles outside of LC and R.E.P.O. have tried their hand at going viral, but few make it. There’s Murky Divers, Nuclear Nightmare, Emissary Zero, Forsaken Frontiers, PILGRIM, YAPYAP, and many, many more—all different variations of one another. But where these games often stumble is their bugginess.

Friendslop exists as a setting and a single gimmick, where the formula is copied and pasted over and over until you forget what made the original so damn good. Even Outlast tried its hand at co-op horror with Trials, and it completely lost what made the original absolutely terrifying—the claustrophobic camcorder.

It appears as though our attention span has been trained to either be satisfied with mediocre (as seen across all media) or be content in supplying entertainment with our own banter that comedically pairs with jankiness and bugs. The fun lies in creating it with friends or watching your favorite streamer play it. And where’s the fun in playing alone when the game isn’t scary and lacks any real danger outside of crashes?

I’ve seen and played them all. The problem with friendslop is that they have genuine potential, but purposely limit themselves because the goal is to simply go viral, make a ton of money, and move on to the next project or disappear altogether. Outside of Lethal Company, R.E.P.O., and even Phasmophobia, most co-op horror lacks creativity. I don’t expect original ideas anymore, but perpetual rip-offs are just as frustrating when playerbases continue to eat it up because of their favorite content creator, or they’re bored because a better title hasn’t seen an update in months.

Co-op horror was a rarity in the past. Left 4 Dead stood alone, apart from experimental games like White Noise in the 2010s. Today’s quota-driven games are helped by random generation, but level design, mechanics, and enemy AI are still important. Updates are needed to retain player attention, and you can’t just ship a broken mess and expect to go viral because proximity chat is entertaining when your friend gets cut off mid-scream. I’m sick of co-op horror titles praying you’ll be happy because its core concept reminds you of the best in the subgenre and little else.

I would love to see the return of couch co-op and genuinely scary games where friends make getting through the nightmare a little easier. Because friendslop continues to go viral and showcase how impeccable graphics aren’t needed to make an amazing game, many developers tag along, believing they can come up with something without having the creativity or drive to do so (beyond getting that big paycheck).

Really, who can blame them for trying?

The post Friendslop is ruining horror games and I’m tired of it appeared first on Destructoid.

Jakotsu-Baba in Nioh 3.

Nioh 3 is a truly visual masterpiece that’s better played in high graphics, but the performance in the early hours hasn’t been smooth. If you’re on a PC, you can easily tweak certain settings to get more out of your hardware.

We already got an early taste of PC gameplay, all thanks to the demo that’s available for free. While a massive benefit is continuing the main story on the full version, it also gave us an idea about what the best set of visual settings might look like.

Best Nioh 3 graphics settings

Before I dive deeper into the settings, here’s how my setup looks.

  • AMD Ryzen 5600G
  • NVIDIA RTX 3060 12 GB
  • 16 GB of DDR5 RAM

Here are the settings I rolled with on my PC.

  • Display Mode: Borderless
  • VSync: Off
  • Resolution: 1920×1080 (depends on your setup)
  • Frame Rate Cap: 60 FPS
  • Graphics Presets: Custom
  • Upscaling: DLSS
  • Sharpening: 1.0
  • Rendering Resolution: 65%
  • Dynamic Resolution: 60
  • Minimum Rendering Resolution: 50%
  • Maximum Rendering Resolution: 65%
  • Frame Generation: Off
  • FPS Dynamic Adjustment: On
  • HDR: Off
  • Post-Effects Resolution: Standard
  • Motion Blur: Off
  • Chromatic Aberration: Off
  • Len Vignette: Off
  • Noise Filter: Off
  • Mach Band Noise: Off
  • Color Precision: Standard
  • Depth of Field: Off
  • Lens Flare: Off
  • Bloom: Off
  • Subsurface Scattering: Off
  • Shadow Quality: Standard
  • Ambient Occlusion: Very Low
  • Model Quality: Standard
  • Model Texture Quality: Standard
  • Number of Models Displayed: Few
  • Wind Sway: Off
  • Anisotropic Filtering: Off
  • Effects: Standard
  • Motion Quality: Low
  • Screen Space Reflection: Very Low
  • Background Mesh Quality: Standard
  • Terrain: Low
  • Grass Density: Low
  • Volumetric Cloud Quality: Low
  • FPS (Cutscenes): 30
  • Cutscene Quality: Standard
  • Global Illumination: Standard

There are two pointers to note.

  • I kept Vsync off because you reduce the load on your system but sacrifices very little in return. Hence, it’s best to keep it off.
  • Keeping the FPS capped to 60 gave me the best results. There were no lags, no stutters, and the performance held steady at 60 FPS. However, you can choose to go for uncapped if you have a better system.

The post Best Nioh 3 settings for no lag and max FPS appeared first on Destructoid.

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