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‘FAITH: The Unholy Trinity’ Coming to the Nintendo Switch This Halloween, Physical Edition Also Available [Trailer]

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Get ready to experience “MORTIS” all over again. New Blood Interactive and Airdorf have announced that not only is their critically-acclaimed 8-bit horror title FAITH: The Unholy Trinity headed to the Nintendo Switch this October (on Halloween, no less!), but it’s also getting a sweet physical edition, courtesy of Fangamer. Pre-orders for this edition are open now.

Initially released way back in 2017 on Steam with the first chapter, FAITH eventually had an additional two chapters added, with the third one arriving back in 2022 (in October, no less). All three chapters will be included in the Switch version, which as of yet doesn’t have an eShop listing. But really, you want to snag that physical version of FAITH, which comes with a few cool physical pieces.

The physical edition of FAITH: The Unholy Trinity includes a reversible cover, a digital download code for the game’s original soundtrack by Airdorf, a 9×12-inch foldout map, a mock newspaper clipping, a sticker sheet, and an 8-page Notice for “Tier I Acolytes” booklet.

Coinciding with the announcement, Airdorf took to Steam to announce that FAITH will be getting additional merchandise, as well as a 1.5 update that tweaks a few areas of the game:

  • Nearly every animated cutscene and most in-game conversations are now skippable
  • Boss battles no longer manually disable the cross at certain points
  • Faster loading times for “hymns” and textures
  • Player can now skip to the end of longer notes and go back in menus with a single button press
  • Improved display compatibility on retro displays
  • DirectInput gamepad functionality
  • Improved appearance when using flashlight
  • Improved accessibility when searching for Spindly Lady
  • A *new* animated cutscene
  • Various crash and bug fixes and minor adjustments

As is the case with FAITH, the 1.5 update is coming “SOON”.

FAITH: The Unholy Trinity is a pixel-based action adventure game inspired by classic Atari games and the “Satanic Scare” of the 1980s. The game takes place appropriately in the 80s, when on September 21, 1986, two priests arrived at the Martin Family home in rural Connecticut to investigate an apparent case of demonic possession. Only two people would leave the house alive.

Writer, Artist, Gamer from the Great White North. I try not to be boring.

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Video Games

Bloober Team’s ‘Cronos: Lazarus’ Leaked Prior to Official Reveal

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Bloober Team appears to have something in the works related to Cronos: The New Dawn. At least, that would appear to be the case, thanks to an accidental reveal ahead of this weekend’s IGN Live event as part of Summer Game Fest.

In the list of title reveals during the event, something referred to as “Cronos: Lazarus” appeared in the list, but was quickly scrubbed. However, not before the internet picked up on it. Adding more fuel to the reveal were two screenshots posted to X by insider Intercelluar, which appear to show the official art. It’s not clear yet, but this is more than likely a new DLC for Cronos: The New Dawn, given that Bloober Team is already busy with multiple other titles, including the Silent Hill remake, and the recently-announced Layers of Fear 3.

If you haven’t checked out Cronos: The New Dawn (and you never read Aaron’s review of the game), the game is set in the haunting ruins of New Dawn, a world inspired by Nowa Huta, a real historical district in Kraków, Poland. Cronos: The New Dawn unfolds across two timelines: a post-apocalyptic future decaying in despair, and the gritty, industrial 1980s reality. This powerful duality blends retro realism, dystopian sci-fi, and a retro-futuristic atmosphere to create a deeply immersive world filled with tension, mystery, and terror.

Players step into the hunting suit of The Traveler — an enigmatic agent of the Collective, sent into zones scarred by the Change, a cataclysmic event that shattered time, memory, and flesh. What remains is a world suspended between past and future — haunted, hostile, and unravelling. Survival is anything but certain.

Thanks to RelyOnHorror for the heads up!

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