One game is 'Alice: Madness Returns'. It has a really insane story set in a dark and twisted Wonderland. Alice is on a journey through this nightmarish version of the familiar place, dealing with her own trauma and facing off against all kinds of grotesque enemies.
Then there's 'Bioshock'. The underwater city of Rapture has a completely insane story. A society built on extreme ideologies, genetic experimentation gone wrong, and a power struggle that's filled with unexpected twists. It's a world full of splicers, Big Daddies, and Little Sisters, and the whole backstory of how it all came to be is mind - boggling.
Deathloop is also quite interesting. You're stuck in a time loop on an island. The goal is to break the loop by assassinating eight key targets in a single day. But the story gets really insane as you figure out the relationships between the targets, their motives, and how the time loop actually works. There are a lot of secrets and unexpected plot twists along the way.
They often have unique and fantastical storylines. The graphics can be really impressive, and the gameplay is usually engaging and challenging.
It depends. Some might find them disturbing because they often deal with mental illness, which can include dark and difficult themes like hallucinations, severe depression, and abnormal behavior.
Well, in some insane asylum horror stories, there could be patients with unexplained powers. For example, a patient who could make others see their worst nightmares just by looking at them. Also, there might be a story where the asylum was built on an ancient burial ground, and the spirits of the dead torment the living in the asylum. There could also be a story about a cruel experiment that went horribly wrong and created a monster - like creature within the asylum.
One sad story could be about patients who were wrongly committed. They might have been suffering from something treatable like depression but were locked away due to lack of understanding in the past. Their cries for help were ignored, and they lost years of their lives in a place that didn't really help them get better.
Sure. There were cases where young children with mental disabilities were placed in asylums and forgotten. They didn't receive proper education or care suitable for their age. Instead, they were just left in a corner, with no real chance to develop or grow in a healthy way.
Often, they involve unexpected events. For example, a person winning the lottery multiple times in a short period. It defies the odds.
Well, my friend once went on a first date where the guy took her to an abandoned building. He said it was an 'urban exploration' date. She was really creeped out at first but then decided to go along with it. They ended up finding some really cool old graffiti and had a long conversation about art. It was a really unexpected and kind of insane first date.
One horror story is about a patient who was constantly heard screaming at night in an old insane asylum. The staff could never find the source of the screams. Turns out, there was a hidden, sealed - off room where a former patient had died in a cruel experiment long ago, and it seemed like his spirit was trapped there, still in agony.
One true story is about a patient who believed he could communicate with the walls. He would spend hours whispering to them as if they were alive. Another story involves a woman who was convinced she was a famous singer from the 1920s and would perform for the other patients in the asylum's hallways. There was also a man who thought he was a bird and would flap his arms and try to perch on the furniture.