Showing posts with label resource management games. Show all posts
Showing posts with label resource management games. Show all posts

26 Nov 2025

REVIEW: Static Dread: The Lighthouse (2025 Video Game) - on Xbox

Review by Jon Donnis

Solarsuit Games has put together a curious mix of tension and sorrow with Static Dread: The Lighthouse. It is a psychological horror adventure wrapped inside a resource management loop, and at its best it feels like a slow descent into a brine soaked nightmare. You play the lone keeper of a forgotten lighthouse on a broken coastline, armed with little more than a temperamental radio and a beacon that seems to fight the darkness as much as illuminate it. Each night you wait for transmissions from ships in trouble, and every reply feels like it could drag you closer to the truth or tip you over the edge.


The atmosphere is the first thing that lands. The visual style is wonderfully unsettling. It gives the island and its waters a sense of rot and despair that never quite lets you breathe. The world feels steeped in folklore and unspoken rituals. You piece it together through static drenched calls, strange logs, and small glimpses of villagers who seem too calm about the things that move beneath the waves. The game takes cues from the clipped tension of Papers, Please and the creeping cosmic dread of old Lovecraft tales, yet it still manages to hold its own identity.


There is real strength in the branching story. Your decisions shape who survives the nights and what truths rise to the surface. Some of the endings veer wildly away from one another, which makes each run feel like a distinct journey. The writing leans heavily on dread rather than shock. It is slow, claustrophobic, and often quietly emotional, especially when reminders of the protagonist's family cut through the storm sounds and scratched out radio signals. It is a clever touch that gives weight to even the smallest choices.


That said, the game does stumble. The moment to moment play can drag. Once you settle into the rhythm of tuning frequencies and responding to distress calls, the repetition becomes obvious. It never quite pushes you hard enough. The danger feels more suggested than experienced, and players who prefer sharp jumps and sudden frights might be left wanting. The tension rises, but it rarely breaks in a way that truly shocks. As a result the nights start to blend together, and the challenge never reaches the heights the atmosphere promises.


It is a shame, because when the game hits its stride it is genuinely compelling. The unsettling art direction, the layered worldbuilding, and the moral grey areas all point toward something special. There is a good story here. The choices you make can twist it in surprising ways. You can feel the pressure building as one odd transmission follows another, and there are moments when the island feels alive with things you are not meant to understand. It just lacks that final spark to lift it from good to unforgettable.


Static Dread: The Lighthouse remains an intriguing attempt that offers tension, style, and a memorable premise, even if it sometimes circles the same waters for a little too long. It delivers an interesting experience with bright flashes of brilliance. It simply feels like it is missing a final layer of bite. For me it lands at a generous 7 out of 10.

Out Now on Xbox