Review Ectopod 3/5 · May 30, 2026
Well worth a few bucks and an hour of your time
I picked up Exit 8 due to the buzz around the movie adaptation. It seemed right up my alley, and for $4 it wasn't exactly a major investment.
For something that amounts to a glorified version of those spot-the-difference puzzles, there's a surprising amount going on. As far as horror goes, it's alright; the scares range from somewhat silly to …
I picked up Exit 8 due to the buzz around the movie adaptation. It seemed right up my alley, and for $4 it wasn't exactly a major investment.
For something that amounts to a glorified version of those spot-the-difference puzzles, there's a surprising amount going on. As far as horror goes, it's alright; the scares range from somewhat silly to genuinely startling, although there's nothing here that is deeply upsetting. As a video game, though, there's a lot of fun ways the designers mess with your head.
First, there's the anomalies. A big part of the initial game play is developing a sense for what counts as an "anomaly" in this setting. How much detail do you need to remember from these hallways? How clear will it be that you are seeing an anomaly? For that matter, when do you know when the game actually starts? As you get a sense for these details, you realize that you need to build out a strategy if you want to spot the anomalies without taking an eternity to finish a loop. Where do you initially look when a loop starts? What types of things do you need to wait for? What is a good order in which to check for different categories of anomalies? Did you remember to check for all the categories of anomalies before running to the next loop?
Then there's the growing sense of frustration and paranoia as you inevitably miss a few anomalies that are incredibly hard to spot. The closer you get to Exit 8, the more maddening it becomes when you find yourself dropped back to the beginning of the loop, even though you were certain there were no anomalies in that last cycle. That frustration builds, making it even likelier you'll miss the next anomaly, no matter how determined you are. That's an impressive amount of narrative heft for such a short title.
It's easy to see how this could be expanded into a snappy supernatural thriller, and I'll definitely catch the movie at some point. As far as these kind of "walking simulators" go, you won't regret spending a few bucks and an hour of your time on this.