Los Angeles Times

Run for your life in a retro ‘Death’

- By Todd Martens

Worse Than Death

(Benjamin Rivers Inc.)

iOS (PC, PlayStatio­n 4, Nintendo Switch listed as in developmen­t) $3.99

In the opening moments of “Worse Than Death,” the protagonis­t and playable character Holly tells her longtime close friend that she has something to get off her chest.

They’re interrupte­d by a drunken former classmate and the conversati­on Holly wants to have never happens.

A few minutes later the player will likely be wishing it had. As the game unfolds, the secrets — and what’s long gone unspoken and unknown in Holly’s suburban hometown — can become as scary as whatever it is that routinely forces Holly to duck and hide.

“Worse Than Death” has the pixelated look from the decade the story references — Holly’s 10-year high school reunion takes place in 1996. But don’t be fooled by the warm, retro feel. “Worse Than Death” soon ramps up the tension.

Things start awkwardly: Holly, who years ago bolted to the city to become a physiother­apist, deduces that a former classmate of hers may have had some sort of romantic entangleme­nt with a teacher. But before she can unravel that creepy tale the dead bodies start piling up. With chests ripped open and hearts and heads missing, the game takes a sudden, rather gruesome swerve. Yet things never get terribly frightenin­g. “Worse Than Death” balances its scares with Holly’s inquisitiv­e rather than fearful tone.

For those who have been binge-watching the latest season of “Stranger Things,” this like-minded genre mash-up from Toronto-based developer Benjamin Rivers may be a rather welcome dessert.

Set about a decade later than the Netflix series, the characters of “Worse Than Death” are older and generally dealing with some rather adult themes. In its opening chapters “Worse Than Death” sets us up to discover a town full of weirdos with unhealthy obsessions.

Think, perhaps, of “Worse Than Death” as a digital escape room of sorts — an escape from Holly’s hometown.

But “Worse Than Death” hasn’t yet spooked this horror-averse player. That’s because ultimately it’s about something we already know: Few things are more frightenin­g than learning the secrets of of our neighbors.

 ?? Benjamin Rivers Inc. ?? THE GAME “Worse Than Death” has a nostalgic pixelated look.
Benjamin Rivers Inc. THE GAME “Worse Than Death” has a nostalgic pixelated look.

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