Visceral Games revive sci-fi survival horror with a silent Isaac Clarke, strategic dismemberment and the spine-chilling Ishimura. Creaking metal and silent necromorphs leave marks that linger long after the credits.
Your verdict
Category
Action Adventure1 player18+
Description
Survival horror by Visceral Games and EA, October 2008. Systems engineer Isaac Clarke responds to the USG Ishimura's distress call and faces Necromorphs - corpses reanimated by an alien entity. Strategic dismemberment to neutralise Necromorphs, zero gravity, oppressive claustrophobic atmosphere and cinematic HUD-free narrative. One of the finest survival horror of its generation.
Dead Space review
MAX
Art direction
★★★★★
"Iconic"
4/5
Music
★★★★★
"Excellent"
MAX
Story
★★★★★
"Masterful"
A spaceship turned into a charnel house, flickering light and repulsive organic creatures: horror is born from a chilling industrial atmosphere. The diegetic interface and the heavy silence deepen a total immersion. This visual direction, dark and polished, stands as a peak of modern survival horror.
Sent to repair a silent mining ship, an engineer finds the crew slaughtered and turned into monsters of flesh. A masterful confined space-horror, the tale distils solitude, madness and a growing religious dread. Its oppressive atmosphere and its cursed artefact made it a classic of survival.
A Visceral Games survival horror aboard a mining ship haunted by creatures that must be dismembered, become a benchmark of space horror for its tension and diegetic interface. Distributed in the West, its appeal lies in this status as a genre classic and a markedly rarer Asian pressing rather than mass distribution. A prime piece for fans of sci-fi horror.
Is Dead Space still worth playing in 2026?
Released in 2008 on Xbox 360, Visceral Games' Dead Space set a new benchmark for space horror, aboard the mining ship Ishimura handed over to the Necromorphs. The idea of strategic dismemberment, where you sever limbs rather than aim for the head, genuinely renews combat. The diegetic interface, displayed straight on Isaac's suit, reinforces total immersion. The sound design and the sense of pacing still chill today. A few cheap jump scares dot the adventure. But the overall craft stays exemplary. For fans of survival horror, this classic remains a safe bet.