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Liminal Exit – A Brilliant Twist on the Anomaly Horror Genre

Liminal Exit

Some games try to scare you with monsters. Others, like Liminal Exit, rattle you with everything else: flickering lights, looping hallways, and barely-there anomalies that twist your brain sideways. Inspired by Exit 8, the Backrooms, and Observation Duty, Liminal Exit from indie dev LittleRedDread is a short but extremely effective atmospheric horror-puzzle game that thrives in subtlety. It’s simple, clever, and immersive—and it’ll have you questioning your memory with every step.

Liminal Exit - Slide Time!
Liminal Exit – Slide Time!

Escape Is an Illusion

The premise is familiar to fans of liminal horror: you’re trapped in a building that doesn’t follow the rules of space or time. You thought it was just an elevator ride or a hallway walk, but now reality loops. And shifts. And watches you back.

Your only means of escape? The elevator. But not just any elevator ride—one that tests your perception and ability to spot what’s out of place. Your job is to ride through three unsettling floors and identify environmental anomalies. Miss too many, or get too comfortable, and you may find yourself stuck. Or worse.

Anomaly Hunting with Stakes

At its core, Liminal Exit is a first-person “spot the difference” game with a heavy horror tone. You walk through eerily quiet corridors, observe your surroundings, then step into the elevator and answer: “Was anything wrong with that floor?”

The anomalies range from hilariously obvious (a chair floating) to brain-bendingly subtle (a missing poster, a slightly skewed vent). There’s no UI clutter, no big tutorial dumps. Just you, the walls, and the creeping realization that something is off.

You can play on Normal or Hardcore mode. On Normal, you get checkpoints. On Hardcore, one mistake resets you to the beginning. It sounds brutal, but the game balances fairness with challenge well. Most of the difficulty comes from testing your memory and attention to detail, not from cheap tricks.

Liminal Exit – Clean ass locker-room

Liminal Perfection

Where Liminal Exit shines is in its vibe. It nails the uncanny feeling of liminal spaces—those transitional, in-between places that should feel familiar but instead feel deeply wrong. The hallways, floors, and lighting are sterile yet distorted. They look like a subway station, or maybe an office, or maybe a fever dream of both.

The visuals are backed by excellent sound design. The ambient audio hums with dread, with occasional unexplainable noises just at the edge of hearing. Footsteps echo in ways that suggest you’re not alone. The music is minimal but effective, kicking in when you least expect it.

Despite being built in Unreal Engine 5 (which has its usual performance hiccups), the game looks great. Some players have noted frame drops on level 2, but the visuals overall—textures, lighting, and animations—carry a unique and haunting aesthetic.

What Works:

What Could Improve:

https://shared.fastly.steamstatic.com/store_item_assets/steam/apps/3044220/extras/742dd7b309dddc87792c6980dbc0cad6.webm?t=1755096111

The Entity & the Endings

Without spoiling too much, yes—there is something following you. It’s subtle, it’s creepy, and it’s a fantastic use of restraint in horror design. The Entity never fully reveals itself, but its presence is always implied. This helps maintain a persistent tension, even when nothing is happening.

The game offers multiple endings depending on your performance and the choices you make. These endings give the player a satisfying sense of conclusion while keeping the overall mystery intact. It doesn’t spell everything out, which fits the genre perfectly.

Liminal Exit: Liminal Exit isn't flashy. It doesn't scream at you with jump scares or throw monsters in your face. Instead, it whispers. It nudges. It watches. It makes you question whether that fire extinguisher was there a minute ago. This game belongs in the same conversation as Exit 8, Observation Duty, and Backrooms titles, but it brings enough originality and polish to stand on its own. It’s short, yes, but it doesn’t waste a second. For fans of atmospheric horror, liminal aesthetics, or just great indie games in general, Liminal Exit is a must-play. Flare

8.5
von 10
2025-08-07T12:01:00+0000
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