Editorials
6 Horrifying Moments In Video Games!
Over the many, many, many hours I’ve spent playing video games, I’ve seen some horrifying things. I’m not talking about a monster jumping out of a dark corner of the room scare that’s all too prevalent in many video games. No sir, I’m talking about the moments that stick with you. The moments that threaten to seep into your everyday life as the only thing you can think about, because they’re so twisted and depraved that your mind cannot possibly comprehend what it just witnessed. Here’s six of the most horrifying moments in gaming that my fragile psyche has ever had to endure. If you can handle it, join me after the break.
Buried In Bodies – Far Cry 3

Did I hype this up enough? I hope so. One of the most horrifying moments I’ve seen happened only a few weeks ago while I was continuing my borderline obsessive playthrough of Far Cry 3. Seriously, if you haven’t played that game yet, you owe it to yourself to do so. It even inspired a list of things I’d like to see in the next Dead island.
The scene I’m talking about happens about halfway through, after you’ve been shot by Vaas, the game’s resident psycho. He shoots you, and you pass out. Now, they think you’re dead, but what they failed to remember is you’re Jason Fucking Brody, and if the horror movies have taught us anything it’s that guys named Jason are really hard to kill. After passing out, you wake up under a pile of corpses, then, instead of showing your brave escape in a cinematic, the game forces you to climb out of the bodies. It’s a very short scene, but easily one of the most terrifying I’ve seen in some time.
The Zombie Head Swivel – Resident Evil

Ah, the classic. Resident Evil broke lots of ground — it was a veritable bulldozer in its groundbreaking prowess — when it released back in 1996. It took horror mainstream, coined the term “survival horror,” and quickly became the biggest horror game franchise of all time. Yeah, it’s a pretty big deal.
For anyone who played the original game (if you didn’t you have no excuse — I was eight when it released and I still found the time to squeeze it in between my LEGO sessions and The Secret World of Alex Mack marathons) there are a few things that probably stuck with you. There’s the dog jumping through the window jump-scare, the laughably awful dialogue (“you were almost a Jill sandwich!”), and the first time you saw a zombie. This moment took up only a few short seconds, but they’re possibly the most important handful of seconds ever, because they pretty much summed up the game: there are zombies, the team you came to rescue is most likely dead and/or eaten, and there’s a very good chance you’re going to be next.
Pyramid Head Rapes A Mannequin – Silent Hill 2

Fuck this scene. Really. This is one of those scenes that you don’t really know what’s going on, all you really know is you want it to stop. Every fiber of your being wants what’s happening to stop, and eventually, it does, but only after it feels as if a lifetime has passed by. Watching Pyramid Head go to town on some mannequins took the horrors of Silent Hill to a whole new level. It showed us that anything is possible and nothing was off limits, even the non-consentual deflowering of helpless monstrosities by other terrifying monstrosities.
The Cabin in the Woods – Condemned 2: Bloodshot

Condemned 2 had a lot to live up to after Criminal Origins set the bar so high, and as a launch title no less. Thankfully, Bloodshot did live up to the standards set by its predecessor, providing plenty of creepy atmosphere, visceral combat, and intense scares along the way. The doll factory is pretty terrifying (and possibly deserves an honorable mention here), but the cabin in the woods stands out. The sole responsibility of the first ten minutes of the chapter is to set up what’s going to happen in the cabin.
In case you haven’t played the game, let me set the scene for you: your plane crashed in a snowy forest. You decide a violent plane crash isn’t enough to stop you, so you start to make your way to a nearby cabin. Along the way, you find disturbing clues that a woodland creature has contracted rabies, causing it to mangle the enemy soldiers in the area. You make it to the cabin, stumbling over an alarming number of bodies and body parts until you make it to the main room of the cabin. Then, a massive rabid bear crashes down the far wall and comes at you. Your only move is to outrun it, but if you’re not faster than the bear you can be sure you’ll meet a gruesome death.
They’re Eating PEOPLE! – The Walking Dead: The Game, Episode 2

Other, possibly more terrifying things have happened in later episodes of Telltale Games’ fantastic The Walking Dead, but I went with this in effort to anger less people who haven’t finished the games yet. In episode 2, aptly titled Starved for Help, Lee and his survival posse are having domestic issues. Tensions are running high, and that’s distracting the group from noticing something far more insidious that’s taking place.
The entire episode is an anxious build-up that eventually climaxes at the end of the episode with a big reveal that shines light on exactly how the survivors that Lee and his group had just befriended had managed to survive so long. The answer: they were eating people. The ending is great, especially Lee’s frantic attempt at keeping Clementine from chomping down on a bite-sized morsel of broiled human flesh, but really, the entire episode does a stunning job of building up the tension before releasing it just when you can’t take it anymore.
Slenderman Catches Up To You – Slender: The Eight Pages

Oh yes, what type of list would this be if I didn’t include a moment many of us shared in one of the scariest games of 2012? Slender: The Eight Pages surprised everyone not just by being incredibly scary, but also with the crazy success it achieved, eventually spawning a Slenderman renaissance that’s seen the inception of games like Huntsman: The Orphanage, Slenderman’s Shadow, Faceless, and Haunt, among others.
It’s beauty of this game is how simple it is: you roam around a seemingly empty forest collecting foreboding pages from someone’s diary. Each page you collect brings you one step closer to solving the mystery, but it also brings Slenderman closer to catching up with you. The music gets louder, the Slenderman sightings become more numerous, and many times I found myself having to wipe off my controller, which was slick with sweat. If you’re not quick enough, Slenderman eventually catches up to you, and the first time it happens, it’s terrifying.
Have a question? Feel free to ever-so-gently toss Adam an email, or follow him on Twitter and Bloody Disgusting.
Editorials
From Antichrist to Action Hero: Sam Neill Redefined Horror’s Leading Man
On July 13th, 2026, the world lost one of its brightest stars.
Beloved New Zealand actor Sam Neill passed away from pneumonia after a long battle with stage 3 lymphoma. The multifaceted movie star will be remembered by mainstream audiences for his iconic role as Dr. Alan Grant in Steven Spielberg’s 1993 masterpiece Jurassic Park, as well as powerful turns in A Cry in the Dark (1988), The Piano (1993), and Hunt for the Wilderpeople (2016), and prestige TV series The Tudors and Peaky Blinders. But horror fans know him as one of the genre’s most surprising Scream Kings.
Through a handful of memorable starring roles, Neill spent the 80s and 90s bringing life to a wide variety of characters and finding humanity in the most unusual leading roles, regardless of how heroic or villainous.
The Final Conflict (1981)

After a decade on the stage and screen in New Zealand and Australia, Neill made his international debut as Damien Thorn in Graham Baker’s The Final Conflict, the third installment of The Omen franchise. Now a 36-year-old businessman, Damien is fully aware of his devilish parentage and hell-bent on world domination. But rather than a hooved and horned monstrosity, Neill’s Antichrist is a suave businessman who leads his followers in an expensive suit and seeks to bring about the apocalypse through deceptive altruism rather than grand proclamation.
Despite his austere demeanor, the man’s true evil knows no bounds. When a prophecy foretells the second coming of Christ, known in the film as “the Nazarene,” Damien commands his followers to commit widespread infanticide, murdering all baby boys born on a specific date. He seduces a high-profile reporter while transforming her teenage son into a bloodthirsty disciple, then uses the child as a human shield. This tricky role allows Neill to demonstrate his trademark versatility, easily charming the outside world while dropping his suave mask of normalcy behind closed doors. Though certain aspects of The Final Conflict are admittedly dated, Neill’s performance feels eerily prescient. He’s mastered the heinous portrayal of a politician willing to sell his soul for power that will ultimately bring about the end of the world.
Possession (1981)

Though Andrzej Żuławski’s Possession is often remembered for Isabelle Adjani’s stunning depiction of a woman on the edge, Neill delivers an equally unhinged performance as Mark, a spy returning home from a lengthy assignment in divided Berlin. Upon discovering that his wife Anna (Adjani) wants a divorce, Mark desperately tries to hold his family together even at the expense of her sanity. Filmed the same year as The Final Conflict, Neill dives headfirst into this visceral role, managing to evoke sympathy for the distraught father who becomes ever more desperate to regain control. Inspired by his own divorce, Żuławski resists blaming either party for the separation, instead showing the chaos and heartache that comes in the wake of a family’s dissolution.
Once considered to replace Roger Moore as the next James Bond, Neill has fun with the international spy persona as Żuławski’s plot grows increasingly bizarre. But the skilled actor never lets us forget that Mark is a flawed human being struggling to keep his life from falling apart. A second character emerges in the film’s mesmerizing climax, allowing Neill to lean into full villainy with a glassy-eyed stare that chills to the bone. Now a cult classic, Adjani and Neill bounce off each other’s seething rage, creating one of the most effective cinematic duets in the history of horror.
Jurassic Park (1993)

When Steven Spielberg’s creature feature first hit theaters, Neill was by no means a household name and hardly a traditional leading man. Without the swashbuckling swagger of Harrison Ford, the mega-watt smile of Tom Cruise, or the chiselled jaw of Brad Pitt — all famous action stars of the era — Neill felt like an unconventional choice for this massive role. But he perfectly captures the essence of Grant, an aloof academic who prefers dig sites to fancy fundraisers and social events. Despite an aversion to children, the dinosaur expert finds himself tasked with saving the theme park’s youngest survivors who gradually break down his emotional walls. Grant’s transformation into a courageous caretaker is a landmark deconstruction of traditional gender norms wrapped in the guise of a rugged outdoorsman.
Neill proves to be the perfect action star, effortlessly navigating Spielberg’s stunning set pieces without losing the character’s relatable hook. But perhaps the film’s most touching moment is Neill’s childlike wonder at seeing a dinosaur for the first time. Stunned to speechlessness, he channels the audience’s wondrous joy when Grant first spies a real, live Brachiosaurus. But he seamlessly weaves this infectious awe into serious concerns about the creature’s existence, amplifying the story’s prophetic messaging. Jeff Goldblum may utter the film’s iconic warning, but the duality of Grant’s performance perfectly illustrates the scientific imperative, reminding us that just because we can doesn’t mean we should.
Neill would go on to lead Joe Johnston’s 2001 sequel Jurassic Park III, in which Grant is again tasked with saving a child. In 2022, he would appear in Colin Trevorrow’s legacy sequel Jurassic World Dominion, which merges the franchise’s two distinct eras while bringing the carnage onto mainland shores. Despite turning in strong performances, neither film is able to top the magic of Spielberg’s original or Neill’s captivating performance as the stoic leading man. But his nuanced depiction of Alan Grant inspired a generation of would-be paleontologists and quiet kids who could now see themselves as courageous academics capable of surprising strength.
In the Mouth of Madness (1994)

After catapulting to worldwide fame, Neill returned to horror proper to lead John Carpenter’s mind-bending In the Mouth of Madness. We first meet John Trent (Neill) as he’s dragged, kicking and screaming, into a padded cell. An unknown stretch of time later, he recounts an unbelievable story while covered in protective crosses scrawled into his skin — and the cell’s walls — with black crayon. A private investigator, Trent has been tasked with locating Sutter Cane (Jürgen Prochnow), a world-famous yet elusive genre author whose work has been driving his ravenous readers to disturbing acts of random violence.
A love letter to fans of horror fiction, we delight in watching Trent explore literary easter eggs that lead him down jarring rabbit holes. A late-night road trip takes Trent and Linda Styles (Julie Carmen), an editor for Cane’s publishing house, to a tiny New England hamlet teeming with darkness. While investigating an ominous cathedral on the outskirts of town, Trent realizes that he’s somehow been transported into the author’s interdimensional story and become its unwitting protagonist.
Neill serves as a skeptical everyman and the audience’s conduit through this bizarre tale of literary monsters that find a way to burst through the page. An often overlooked Carpenter film, In the Mouth of Madness spirals into insanity, but Neill keeps us grounded throughout each outlandish twist. A shocking conclusion leaves us gaping at our screens and contemplating our own relationship with horror fiction. After all, does free will truly exist? Or, like Trent, are we merely pawns in someone else’s monstrous creation?
Event Horizon (1997)

One of the scariest movies ever set in space, Paul W.S. Anderson’s Event Horizon builds upon the heroic image Neill established for himself in Jurassic Park. Dr. William Weir (Neill) is a physicist temporarily joining the crew of the Lewis and Clark to assist in their latest rescue mission. Seven years after vanishing without a trace, a spaceship called the Event Horizon has suddenly reappeared near Neptune’s orbit. As the creator of a top-secret gravity drive designed to facilitate faster-than-light travel, Dr. Weir has been sent to explore the ship and find out what happened to its missing crew.
Still haunted by his late wife’s suicide, Dr. Weir is a sympathetic figure, particularly in comparison to the harsh Captain Miller (Laurence Fishburne) who commands the crew of the Lewis and Clark. But Weir’s desperation to return to the infamous ship hides a sinister secret that leads his fellow astronauts to the threshold of hell. Neill’s talent for playing the everyman pays off in spades as the formerly sympathetic widower transforms into a disciple of this frightening dimension. Resembling a long-lost cenobite, Weir claws out his own eyes and prepares to drag the crew into a world consumed with sadistic pain.
Daybreakers (2009)

Neill returns to his Omen roots in Michael and Peter Spierig’s action-packed film as a secretly sinister businessman. But rather than the Antichrist, Charles Bromley (Neill) is a proud vampire convinced of the species’ superiority. With human blood in short supply, Bromley Marks Corp. is working on a synthetic substitute to prevent the human race from impending extinction. While hematologists perfect the formula, Bromley oversees disturbing fields of humans chained to massive machines that systematically harvest their blood.
Neill chills in this sinister role with vampiric yellow eyes, a pale complexion, and subtle fangs. But more upsetting is the fact that he honestly doesn’t believe he’s wrong. Once diagnosed with cancer, Bromley was delighted to find that vampirism would totally reverse his illness and grant him the gift of eternal life. He begged his daughter Alison (Isabel Lucas) to turn alongside him, but she has rejected her father’s controversial choice and is now hunted by his bloodthirsty goons. In a heartbreaking moment of clarity, Bromley brings his daughter to the brink of death, then turns away in disgust when she will not embrace his undead lifestyle.
Daybreakers is a surprisingly thrilling exploration of survival and sustainability. Similar to a plot Damien Thorn would hatch, Bromley’s ultimate plan is to placate the vampire population with synthetic blood while allowing the human population to replenish itself. With a larger stock, he plans to sell authentic humans at a premium, hunting these poor souls to season the meat. Bromley rejects a cure that would reverse the vampiric disease, choosing to enrich himself over saving the world. The strangely captivating villain’s end is a cathartic nightmare and fitting punishment for a wealthy man who places himself above everyone else.

In the Mouth of Madness
While the world may remember Neill for his signature role as a gruff but compassionate paleontologist going head to head with a raging T-Rex, horror fans may picture the versatile actor maniacally rocking back and forth in a filthy Berlin apartment, commanding a boardroom of corporate vampires, disappearing into the darkness of a haunted spaceship, sermonizing to satanists, or giggling over popcorn in a deserted movie theater. Or perhaps you have another favorite role in the beloved actor’s stellar career. But whether he was playing a hero or villain, Neill brought undeniable humanity to every role, redefining our idea of masculinity and the very nature of goodness vs. evil. By bringing such disparate characters to life, Neill challenged audiences with a variety of complex roles, asking us to examine the humanity of each character no matter how flawed or virtuous.
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