![]() The Ring (2002). A young journalist must investigate a mysterious videotape which seems to cause the death of anyone in a week of viewing it. With the megahit popularity of movies like Paranormal Activity and games like Five Nights at Freddy's, some recent horror experiences have tried to recreate those. Best Horror Movies We went down into the crypt, opened the coffin, and summoned the 75 best-reviewed horror films of all time. Behold -- it's RT's Horror Countdown, a. Most Terrifying Low Budget Horror Movies Ever. You have to have money to make a movie. Budgets for blockbusters can run up to hundreds of millions of dollars. However, finding money to make a film can be difficult, even at the best of times. Because horror has sometimes been pushed to the fringes of the movie industry, finding money to make scary movies, especially ones with first time directors, can be difficult, if not impossible. This means that occasionally fright films are made on a shoestring budget. Several movies in this article were made with under $1. Working on a film with a $1. So, it’s satisfying when a movie such as this manages to bring home $1. Kailey Marsh, an independent literary manager & producer and the creator of BloodList.com, gives TheWrap the scoop on the horror movies you should see. Many horror movies have to work with shoestring budgets, and, while some of them turn out horribly, there are a a few that are truly terrifying. The films on this list run the gamut of horror films– from zombies, to slashers, to demons and witches, to ghosts, and back again. They include jump scares, stalking menaces, scary music, and moments of tense anticipation. Most did pretty well at the box office, with some even becoming international sensations. Here are the 1. 5 Most Terrifying Low Budget Movies Ever. Night Of The Living Dead. In the pre- VHS 1. Saturday afternoon of movies. Then came George Romero’s Night of the Living Dead, complete with an army of murdering zombies intent on cannibalism. Children were traumatized and parents were outraged. What Romero turned out on a budget of only $1. Zombie Apocalypse genre. Let’s take a look at the biggest and best horror movies of 2016. The scary list features the usual mix of sequels ( Ethan Peck, grandson of Gregory, stars in this horror film riff on the Brothers Grimm classic. In an era when color dominated movie screens, Romero purposefully chose to film in black and white, using dark film noir lighting. At a time of racial tension and Civil Rights protests, he made a black man the hero. In 1. 95. 0s horror movies, the military often saved the day. Here, however, Romero brings in pompous, ineffectual generals who underscore the growing hopelessness of the situation. The exploration of social issues, such as racism, consumerism, and the military, is a hallmark of Romero’s films. ![]() These 70 horror films don't use cheap thrills to get scares. They rely on atmosphere and suspense rather than gore and jump-scares. We've combed through every decade in the history of cinema to create a list of the 75 best horror movies ever made, from Nosferatu to the chic It Follows. Back to selection So You Want to Make a Horror Film? On Jump Scares and Other Basics of Fright. Add to this a sense of stalking horror, pretty decent acting, and subtly shot scenes of blood and gore, and you have a winning formula that added up to $1. Halloween. John Carpenter’s revolutionary 1. Halloween was made on a shoestring production budget of $3. It was a simple formula: a man in a eerie mask brandishing a knife kills terrified, screaming teenagers. It’s a potent combination of tense suspense and jump scares were made memorable due to Carpenter’s masterful direction. The musical score is a big part of the scare element of the movie. In fact, when Carpenter first showed the un- scored film to studio executives, they were unimpressed. The music, he has said, saved the film. Halloween is a merciless thriller that was originally best enjoyed in a packed theater on a weekend night. Things– both good and bad– popped up out of nowhere and everyone screamed at the same time. Audiences did not so much “see” the film, but instead experienced it. Michael Myers, the man in the mask, went on to kill some 1. Halloween films. 1. The Blair Witch Project. The Blair Witch Project was effectively the first English language “found footage” horror movie. The premise was refreshingly original: student filmmakers toting video cameras go into the woods in Maine in search of the Blair Witch, which leads to their eventually disappearance. Their footage is later found and made into the movie. The beauty of found footage films is that audiences experience them in the moment, living the terror as it supposedly happens. The Blair Witch Project used grainy and jerky images, close ups of terror- filled eyes, a lurking, never- seen evil, and an enigmatic ending, to turn a film made on a budget of $6. It also used a marketing campaign that included issuing “missing” posters for the three missing students. Its success made found footage movies popular, and influenced films such as The Visit. However, the 2. 01. Blair Witch divided fans and critics, with some praising Adam Wingard’s direction and others criticizing its use of found footage movie cliches. Friday the 1. 3th. Campfire boogeyman film Friday the 1. However, it is a scary one and has become a cult classic. In fact, some fans consider it one of the top jump scare movies of all time. The tale of a group of teenage counselors reopening Camp Crystal Lake, and then being targeted one by one, introduced serial killer Jason Voorhees– an iconic character who has stalked and murdered his way through twelve Friday the 1. One of the final scenes of the 1. Jason’s mangled corpse drags counselor Alice from a drifting boat into Crystal Lake– has become a jump scare classic moment. Amid a critical and parental storm over its level of violence and gore, Sean S. Cunningham turned a $5. It Follows It Follows is a stylish supernatural psychological retro- feel horror movie that skillfully employs a shape shifting “It” that stalks Jay, a teenage girl played by Maika Monroe, after she has sex with the new boy in town. The movie was the break out film for director David Robert Mitchell and, on an estimated production budget of $2 million, earned over $1. The scenes where “It” shape shifts into the half naked mother of Jay’s friend Greg and kills him, as well as the final scene in which Jay and her new lover Paul are followed down a street by someone or something, are spine tingling chilling. The sometimes rumbling and electronic score is a synth- heavy stand out and synchs perfectly with the slow camera movements. Mitchell has waved away film critics’ insistence that the movie is about fear of intimacy or HIV/AIDS, saying he doesn’t really care where “It” came from. After her appearances in Adam Wingard’s The Guest and It Follows, Maika Monroe has been dubbed the “Scream Queen” of her generation. Director Darren Aronofsky could not even afford to buy filming location licenses, and so crew members acted as look outs, warning the set team whenever the police were near. Pi follows the story of Max, a brilliant, tortured reclusive mathematician who suffers from terrible headaches and his search for the perfect number that will unlock the key for understanding all of existence. He is stalked and hounded by sinister forces that want to use his research to unlock the secrets of the universe. His mad obsession is as frightening as the forces of evil which surround him. The film is shot in a rough, high contrast black and white, which adds to the sense of madness and menace, and gives the film a retro feel. At the end, driven mad by his quest and stalkers, Max takes a drill to his skull, thereby obliterating both his headaches and his genius. Critics praised the tale of a man pursuing a dangerous obsession, and the movie made $3 million domestically at the box office. Evil Dead 2. What makes Evil Dead 2 so good? Well, other than actor Bruce Campbell’s character Ash and Sam Raimi’s direction, the movie is a scary/funny “cabin in the woods” film, which acts as a “macabre Saturday morning cartoon.”It focuses on Ash, who– after being the only survivor of the flesh- possessing demons in Evil Dead— makes the mistake of taking his fiance to a secluded cabin in the woods where, no surprise, more demons are lurking. It’s an energetic romp in which Ash, having beheaded his demon- possessed fiance, battles a headless ballerina, demented animal heads, and even his own hand. The action never stops, and it certainly never slows down. It is funny and terrifying at the same time: the almost comical battle with his possessed hand ends with Ash severing his hand with a chainsaw. The budgets for Raimi films are hard to pin down, but some sources peg the budget for Evil Dead 2 at around $3. It managed to bring in $5. Texas Chain Saw Massacre. Tobe Hooper took $3. The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, an unabashed and unashamed exploitation film that gave the world a chainsaw wielding assassin called Leatherface, a being who systematically stalks, slices up, and then wears the skins of his victims. It is extremely gory and gruesome, and seems to exist only to induce fright and revulsion. At that, it succeeds brilliantly. Because it was ingeniously and falsely advertised as a “true story” it attracted a wide audience and eventually raked in more than $3. Many critics had to admit that the movie was well done, and had some pretty spectacular special effects. Its horror was beyond mere schlock horror, and the film was initially slapped with an X- Rating. In spite of originally being somewhat exploitative, it has become a horror classic. Days Later. The 2. British film directed by Danny Boyle (Slum Dog Millionaire), 2. Days Later, is a post- apocalyptic horror movie that involves in which a virus kills off most of mankind. Cillian Murphy’s Jim wakes up from a month- long coma to discover that he is sharing London with hordes of virus infected zombies. He, of course, joins forces with some other survivors and the battle begins. Visual and sound jump scares alternate with a stalking menace, in order to provide a regular dose of surprise, with a touch of suspense. Then, when you thought it couldn’t get any worse, the survivors find themselves ensnared in a sinister military plot to force the surviving women into sexual slavery in order repopulate the world. Their leader, Major West– a demented and dangerous psychopath– is as much a threat to the group as the zombies. Evil, it seems, is inescapable. At the end of the film, Jim lies dying in a hospital bed. Test audiences hated originally the ending and so a new “happy” ending was substituted. The film was a success, making close to $4. Paranormal Activity. Paranormal Activity is another found footage classic. It follows the story of boyfriend and girlfriend Micah Sloat and Katie Featherston, who move into a tract house only to find that there is a supernatural presence in the home with them. They then set up a video camera to shoot footage. Sound and visual jump scares, as well as a series of lurking demonic presences and shadows, are interspersed into the footage. Even when nothing is happening, audiences are straining to see what could possibly happen next. Best horror movies: fantastic films to stream or buy in 2. There's nothing better than watching a decent horror movie. A horror movie that forces you to sleep with the light on after watching it. A horror movie that latches onto your deepest, primal fears, pokes and prods at your psyche, strangles you with fear and raises your heart rate to palpitation levels. These types of horror movies are rare, and that is what makes them so special. The following is a hand- picked list of the best horror movies on Netflix and Amazon Prime Video you should - no, need to - watch right now. They are the titles on Netflix and Amazon that will induce fear but as you will see, fear takes different forms. Sometimes it's foreboding, sometimes it's mixed with comedy, other times it's bloody and brutal. And then there's that other fear: the fear that you have missed off some damn good movies from a list. If that's the case, then let us know in the comments below. The Babadook. Don't let it in. Date: 2. 01. 4 . The plot revolving around a creepy bedtime book is secondary to the fraught relationship between widowed Amelia (Essie Davis) and her six- year- old son Samuel (Noah Wiseman). It plays on the usual fear- inducing tropes but the real horror of the movie is seeing a family in grief and the devastating sadness that accompanies this. Insidious. What's in that picture? Date: 2. 01. 4 . Insidious feels like a much more grown up horror movie, that eschews blood for Poltergeist- style japes. Patrick Wilson and Rose Byrne are husband and wife who are looking after their coma- induced son. Some great cinematography makes up for a plot that does annoyingly veer into supernatural territory near the end. Despite this, there's a lot of fun to be had. Let's Scare Jessica To Death. Something is after Jessica. Something very dead. Date: 1. 97. 1 . Shot through a dream- like lens, the movie follows a group of mates looking to find solace for their friend Jessica, who has just been released from a clinic. After a road trip they end up shacking up in an empty house that comes complete with a stranger called Emily. Full of subtle scares, marvellous missteps and lingering shots, Let's Scare Jessica To Death is a must watch. Would You Rather. Tell yourself it's just a game. Date: 2. 01. 3 . Would You Rather has an interesting concept - the ultimate life or death game of 'would you rather' hosted by a sadistic aristocrat - that doesn't quite reach the heights it should but you will have a lot of fun watching it try. Definitely not one for the squeamish! February. Abandoned as a child. Raised by the dark. Date: 2. 01. 5 . The soundtrack soars with synths, the visuals are gorgeous and the acting from Mad Men alumni Kiernan Shipka and Emma Roberts is sublime. It takes its time and is something of an odd watch but February is one of the best new horrors around. I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House. Netflix and chills. Date: 2. 01. 6 . Made by director Osgood Perkins, who created the brilliant February and incidentally is the son of Psycho’s Anthony Perkins so has horror in his veins, I Am The Pretty Thing That Lives In The House is a tough watch as its pace is glacial. But it fizzes with so much unease that it will leave you mesmerised. Hush. Silence can be killer. Date: 2. 01. 6 ? By making the protagonist deaf and unaware of what’s going until it’s nearly too late. That’s the premise of Hush and it breathes new life into the cat- and- mouse psychopath genre. Hush is another great movie from the Blumhouse lot - those who created Paranormal Activity - and is directed by Oculus’ helmer Mike Flanagan. Let Me In. Innocence dies. Abby doesn't. Date: 2. Director Matt Reeves ports this vampire story from the cold of Stockholm to New Mexico, telling the tale of a 1. The 1. 98. 0s setting adds to the unease, as does Reeves’ assured direction. Days of Night. They're Coming! Date: 2. 00. 7 . 3. Days of Night is a simple premise: vampires descend on an Alaskan town that suffers from total darkness for one month of the year and cause total carnage. Josh Hartnett is great as the grizzled resident who has to fight for his life. Paranormal Activity. Don't See It Alone. Date: 2. 00. 7 . Although the franchise suffers, as many horror series do, from diminishing returns, the sequels are also worth a watch. Starry Eyes. She would kill to be famous. Date: 2. 01. 4 . Pitch black in its tone and set to an unnerving score, Starry Eyes is a great but haunting watch. Creep (2. 01. 4)A videographer answers Craigslist advert but not all is as it seems. Date: 2. 01. 4 . Creep is a, well, creepy look at someone who answers an online ad to make a movie for a stranger’s unborn child. What ensues is, as you’d expect, not a movie for the child but something altogether more sinister. The Exorcism of Emily Rose What happened to Emily? Date: 2. 01. 4 . Based loosely on a true story, the film is set around a court case where a reverend is being charged for wrongful death after an exorcism goes wrong. The scares may be gore free, but they are no less chilling. It Follows. It doesn't think. It doesn't feel. It doesn't give up. Date: 2. 01. 4 . It Follows follows Jay Height ( a brilliant Maika Monroe) who after a sexual encounter is chased by a strange force that will not leave her alone until she has sex again. Shot as an 8. 0s movie, complete with 8. Blair Witch There's something evil hiding in the woods. Date: 2. 01. 6 . In hindsight it probably wasn’t the best marketing trick as a lack of hype meant that the movie appeared and disappeared without much fanfare but catch it now on Netflix and you are in for a treat. Director Adam Wingard is one of the best indie horror auteurs around and he manages to update the Blair Witch myth - even including drones in the mix - without forgetting just what made the original scary in the first place. Under The Shadow. Fear will find you. Date: 2. 01. 6 . All of the horror within it is built up through suspense and the backdrop of war- torn Tehran. It’s a tale of a mother and daughter living in Tehran in the 8. British director Babak Anvari is a director to watch. With Under The Shadow, he’s created an understated slow- burning masterpiece. The Cabin in the Woods. You think you know the story. Date: 2. 01. 2 . Yup, we’ve seen it all before with Scream but Cabin In The Woods takes it to a whole new, and rather surprising, level. Those going into this movie hoping to see a standard horror will be thoroughly disappointed but if you are happy with a movie that twists so away so wildly from its original plot into almost sci- fi territory, while also exploring how horror movies are designed to make you jump the Cabin In The Woods is for you! Bone Tomahawk. May the Lord have mercy and grant you a swift death. Date: 2. 01. 5 . Craig Zahler . Bone Tomahawk is a brilliant, bloody and horrific look at what happens when you marry a cowboy movie with a cannibal exploitation flick. Kurt Russell is superb as Sheriff Hunt, the leader of a group that goes out in search of a ruthless gang that have ravaged a town and taken a number of people hostage. In that gang is the earnest Patrick Wilson and an unhinged Matthew Fox. Rarely has such a movie come along and managed to bully itself into cult status so quickly but that’s exactly what Bone Tomahawk has done. The Descent. Face Your Deepest Fear. Date: 2. 00. 5 . The Descent is the best of them. It’s a claustrophobic chiller that sees a caving expedition go horribly wrong when they are trapped and something comes for them from the deep darkness of the caves. Sinister. Once you see him, nothing can save you. Date: 2. 01. 2 . Sinister is his best, a creepy heart- wrenching movie centred on a true- crime writer who moves into a new home and finds a box of Super 8 snuff movies. The film takes its time to tell its tale but when it does, it’s pretty horrifying. Ethan Hawke plays the author who discovers the chilling secret, raising this above your average horror yarn. Wolf Creek. The Thrill Is In The Hunt. Date: 2. 00. 5 . He may well look like a regular Ozzy guy who likes a Tooheys New or two, but underneath all that he’s a serial killer who likes to kill tourists in some of the most inventive ways possible. Interestingly, John Jarratt - unknown outside Australia - was an inspired choice for Mick. Stream Wolf Creek on Amazon Prime Video now. I Saw The Devil. To Catch A Monster He Must Become One. Date: 2. 01. 0 . It’s about revenge, it features some of the most horrific acts of violence ever put to film but it’s also a compelling, if flinching watch. Directed by genius Korean director Jee- woon Kim, who also did the amazing The Quiet Family, the film is a masterpiece in shock and awe, focusing on a serial killer who is hunted by a retired cop who has vengeance on his mind. Train To Busan. Zombie movie with Seoul. Date: 2. 01. 6 . The plot is ingenious: unbeknownst to the public a zombie outbreak is happening in Seoul. We see the effect on this on a fast train to Busan where the outbreak takes over the speeding train and threatens all the passengers on board. This is one of the most frenetic zombie films ever, filled with some fantastic set pieces and a helluva lot of tension. Hell House LLCNew York's Scariest Haunted House Tour. Date: 2. 01. 5 . It’s a found footage horror movie that really does shock and scare you throughout. The premise is simple: a group of entrepreneurs have created a horror house for frat boys and others to scare themselves silly in. The problem is, the house actually seems to be haunted. Regardless of it being a little known movie, this is one of the best horror movies to be released in years. Horror games that don't rely on jump scares. An earlier version of this article originally appeared on this site on October 3. Say goodbye to . You know the ones: a big scary ghost face suddenly pops up in front of you, accompanied by an ear- piercingly loud scream or violin chord. Some gamers get a kick out of these startling moments; others find them stressful, tedious, or laughably dumb, particularly when they're overused. There's a distinct difference between being surprised and being scared, but plenty of horror games mistake one for the other. Luckily, there are those games that understand the value of suspense and atmosphere, able to pull you into their deeply unsettling worlds without opting for a cheap 'OOGA BOOGA!' moment every 1. That's not to say that the following games have absolutely zero jump scares - but they use them sparingly, reserved for satisfying payoffs sandwiched between long stretches of tension as the game slips under your skin. If you're not a fan of cheap scares that rely on your pre- programmed evolutionary instincts to be effective, these games might be your style of horror. Siren: Blood Curse. Specializes in: A chilling, voyeuristic version of hide- and- go- seek. Zombies are creepy enough as it is - but what's even scarier than a reanimated corpse is a flesh- devouring Shibito ghoul that's still clinging to a semblance of its original personality. This pale- skinned twist on your typical walker - many of whom are infested with insect parasites - serve as the basis for Siren: Blood Curse, an episodic, thoroughly Japanese horror series that's easy to find on PSN. You'll play as seven different characters trapped in the misty Hanuda Village, some of whom have the capacity to fight back against the legion of chanting stalkers. But eventually, you'll be forced to use Siren's most intriguing mechanic: the . This ability lets you see from the perspective of your undead pursuer, praying that they don't find your hiding spot as you catch a glimpse of yourself through their eyes. Instead of banking everything on fleeting, one- note scares, Siren: Blood Curse is all about the almost unbearable build- up of anxiety, until you just can't take it anymore and decide to flee in terror. Check it out here. Bloodborne. Specializes in: Traditional Hammer horror, plus a persistent need for self- preservation. Sure, Bloodborne's got the heart of an action RPG - it follows in the hallowed footsteps of the Souls series, and it certainly requires more mechanical skill and dexterity than any other game on this list. But once you've acclimated yourself to your Hunter's nimble movements and weapons of choice, you'll be able to see past the intense combat to really appreciate just how spooky the city of Yharnam really is. Every enemy design is bristling with macabre details like disgusting mandibles or bits of rotting flesh, and the environment reveals some intensely disquieting secrets once you've built up enough Insight (cleverly designed stat representing your deeper understanding of the world). Of course, there's always the fear for your own survival keeping you on the edge, knowing that a mid- fight misstep could cost you an hour of hard- fought progress. Trust me when I say it's a good kind of afraid. Check it out here. Ib. Specializes in: Classic haunted house spookiness, with artistic anime flair. Ib (pronounced 'eeb') is the perfect introduction to world of creepy, classy RPG Maker horror games (which, by the way, are almost always free). It's plenty eerie wandering through a museum that may or may not be haunted, but Ib treats its frightening crescendoes with a soft touch, terrifying you just enough so that you're constantly giddy at the thought of whatever clever scares might await you around the next corner. The story can also be touching or morbid depending on your choices, and you never have to worry about combat - it's just you and your aesthetically pleasing, increasingly distressing surroundings, which you're free to explore at your own pace. Also, the scene with the room full of dolls will stay with you forever. Check it out here. System Shock 2. Specializes in: Claustrophobia, and the distinct feeling that you're being watched. The precursor to Bio. Shock is arguably just as ingenious, set on a futuristic space station rather than an undersea dystopia. As one of the few survivors on a ship full of hideously infected crewmembers, you have to figure out just what the hell is going on and how you're going to survive your rude awakening from cryosleep. There's a distinct sense of place to the eerily quiet, corpse- ridden hallways on the Von Braun ship, but your apprehension will quickly turn to terror whenever you encounter the gruesome mutants that run rampant throughout its corridors. You don't know fear until you've desperately tried to hide from a gang of screaming psychic monkeys (which shoot plasma from their exposed brains), with only a wrench and the cover of darkness to protect you. Check it out here. Sanitarium. Specializes in: Pure psychological strangeness, with a lot of heart underneath the ugly exterior. Deformed children. That's close to the first thing you see in Sanitarium, an early, incredible example of psychological horror in games. You see through the eyes of Max, an amnesiac who's struggling to piece together his identity after a nasty car crash (and sounds vaguely like Hank from King of the Hill). The only thing you're certain of is that your face is covered in bandages, and you're trapped in an insane asylum with no concept of what's real and what isn't. It's nearly impossible to find Sanitarium's aging graphics scary these days, but that doesn't mean you won't be disturbed by the twisted scenarios Max is torn between. A small town where kids play hide- and- seek with dead bodies, a dilapidated circus, the strange, intestine- like inside of an alien ship - you're never quite sure what kind of creepiness awaits you next, or how you're supposed to interpret it. Check it out here. Yume Nikki. Specializes in: Mild unease, deep- set confusion. There are so many RPG Maker horror stories to choose from: games like Ao Oni, The Witch's House, and Mad Father, to name a few. But Yume Nikki stands out from the crowd for its incredibly bizarre ambience and totally abstract gameplay - if you can even call it gameplay, because the whole thing boils down to exploring and basic puzzle solving. You're primarily wandering through the dreamscape of the reclusive main character Madotsuki, encountering bleak expanses and psychedelic mazes in equal measure. A lot of the amusement of Yume Nikki is derived from figuring out what you're supposed to be doing at a given time, if there's even anything you can do. It's a positively ethereal game, with hours of unsettling entertainment for the curious. Check it out here. Silent Hill 2. Specializes in: Intensely disturbing content (and not just its monsters)Silent Hill 2 is the master class in atmospheric horror. The Silent Hill franchise has always excelled at captivating you with themes that are just as unsettling as its otherworldly monstrosities, and this is, without a doubt, the best Silent Hill game of all time. Its story centers around our mild- mannered protagonist James Sunderland and his nightmarish search for answers after he's somehow contacted by his dead wife. The entities James encounters in Silent Hill's foggy streets are terrifying at first sight, but it's what they really mean about James' psyche that makes them truly unnerving. And if you've never introduced yourself to Pyramid Head, with his colossal, rusty blade and grimy apron, there's no time like the present - just make sure you've got some spare trousers handy. Check it out here. Theresia. Specializes in: Apprehension of the world and all its cruelty. This is about as obscure a horror game as they come (not counting the actual Obscure series, mind you). But it's still readily available on Amazon, provided you don't mind paying a little extra for a haunting rarity of a game. This first- person DS thriller is actually an import from the Korean mobile gaming scene, meaning it's probably unlike anything you've ever played before. It revolves around two interweaving stories of a woman and a man trying to get by in a war- torn nation. With elements of claustrophobia, hypochondria, and psychological horror, Theresia tackles a wide array of emotions that few games do. Just be ready when the tears start flowing. Check it out here. Lone Survivor. Specializes in: Dementia and emotional distress. Take I Am Legend, remove the dog, and make the protagonist a nameless everyman. That's the simplest description of Lone Survivor's premise, though there's so much more to it than that. As you struggle to maintain your sanity and ration basic necessities, you can try to fend off hordes of spindly mutants or use stealth to stay unnoticed. The choice is yours, but no matter what you do, you'll find that going it alone in a post- apocalypse can wreak serious havoc on a fragile psyche. Hallucinations are everywhere, until you're completely unsure of what's actually happening. All you'll know for certain is that the music is amazing. Check it out here.
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