It’s not just the fish that bite.
Out Fishing, the debut title from solo developer Mūn Mūn Games and publisher UNIKAT Label (of POOLS and Dystopika fame), has officially been announced—and it’s already casting long shadows across the horror genre. A fusion of first-person fishing sim and psychological survival horror, Out Fishing brings players to a quiet, remote lake where calm waters hide creeping terror.
🎥 Watch the announcement trailer here
🎣 A Line Between Reality and Madness
By day, you fish. By night, you run.
At first glance, Out Fishing invites players into a laid-back life of catching fish, selling them for profit, and upgrading gear. You’ll build up your camp in the forest, unlock tools to explore deeper waters, and maybe even enjoy the eerie quiet. But as the sun fades, so does the barrier between real and unreal.
Voices whisper. Fog rolls in. And sometimes… your catch starts talking back.
🌲 Features That Haunt
- A Slow-Burn Horror Story
Explore a lakeside wilderness teeming with unease. Follow a missing persons mystery across days of strange visions and unnerving discoveries. - Dynamic Day-Night Cycle
Daylight is your window to fish, explore, and earn. But nightfall brings changes—subtle at first, deadly soon after. - Upgrade & Survive
Unlock fishing gear, tools, and even vehicles to reach farther—and more dangerous—parts of the lake. But always get back before dark. - Light Survival Mechanics
Gather supplies and reinforce your camp—but focus on your nerves, not your inventory. - Atmospheric World-Building
From haunted woods to half-submerged ruins, every corner of the lake echoes with a past you were never meant to uncover.
🧠 Psychological Terror, Cast One Line at a Time
With a narrative echoing the creeping dread of games like Silent Hill or Mundaun, Out Fishing turns a simple sim into a descent into obsession. The deeper you go for answers, the more the forest fights back. You are alone—but it doesn’t feel that way.
🛶 Coming Soon to PC
Out Fishing is coming to PC. You can wishlist it on Steam now and prepare for a horror experience that doesn’t come crashing in—it drips in, one quiet drop at a time.
But remember: the lake doesn’t forget.
