Outlast’s traditional cat-and-mouse gameplay may be reprised here in some regard, but The Outlast Trials already looks more robust with new gameplay mechanics that players should expect. This gives Red Barrels an unending amount of ingenuity and potential with the trials it proposes for players, especially when it is considered that The Outlast Trials intends to feature co-op with up to four players. The environments shown thus far for The Outlast Trials are incredibly elaborate set pieces, not unlike the ones established in the Saw franchise. Set during the Cold War, players are involuntarily dragged off to be scientific test subjects and endure sadistic challenges that it considers therapy, with survival being the only goal that players have. Relinquishing the story-driven premise of Outlast and Outlast 2, Red Barrels has decided to take its third installment in a relatively opposite direction with The Outlast Trials. RELATED: TimeSplitters 3 Has a Great Horror Level to Play for Halloween The Outlast Trials Seems to Follow the Saw Formula Only scarce details have been shared about The Outlast Trials, but its survival-horror co-op gameplay may lend itself well to having players help one another escape Jigsaw’s traps. If the intent is to remove the IP from the shelf and give it a home with a new developer, Red Barrels might find success with it following the third installment of its Outlast franchise. Fortunately, Red Barrels’ next horror title will be The Outlast Trials, which could offer the perfect formula for a co-op Saw game.įurther, it’s not like there hasn’t been an attempt to revive the franchise in games in the recent past, since it is already publicly known that Bloober Team passed on the Saw license in favor of Blair Witch. Considering the torture puzzles that typically constitute a Saw experience, there are few designs that would work. But Saw is still an IP that could potentially be adapted to games in a meaningful and satisfying way, so long as it has the right developer and the right gameplay. Saw’s theatrical franchise may not be everyone’s favorite horror series, especially in its later entries, and its game adaptations may not have had any better reception.
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