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Don’t Mess With Bober Review (Xbox)
Every so often, an indie game comes along with a premise so bizarre you can’t help but lean in. Don’t Mess With Bober is exactly that kind of experience. It's a short, scrappy, first‑person horror‑comedy built around the idea that a beaver, pushed too far, can become the most determined killer in the woods. It’s a game that knows its concept is ridiculous and embraces it, but it also tries to deliver genuine tension, frantic chase sequences, and a surprisingly varied set of e

XPN Network
Apr 6


Mortanis Prisoners - Review - Xbox
Mortanis Prisoners drops you into a Nazi concentration camp on the brink of collapse, an already horrific setting made worse by something ancient and hungry stirring beneath the grounds. It’s a compact survival‑horror shooter that leans into dread, resource scarcity, and oppressive atmosphere rather than bombast. On Xbox Series XS, it runs smoothly, looks sharp in 4K, and delivers a focused, unsettling experience that feels like a throwback to classic horror design with moder

XPN Network
Mar 11


EBOLA VILLAGE — A Rotting Mystery Worth Exploring
Developed by indie_games_studio, EBOLA VILLAGE marks the team’s most ambitious attempt yet to bring their signature brand of grim, bio‑horror survival to consoles. The studio has always operated on the fringes of the indie horror scene, a small team, big ideas, unapologetically rough edges and this entry continues that tradition while pushing into new territory. Where previous EBOLA titles leaned heavily into corridor‑based panic and viral‑outbreak chaos, EBOLA VILLAGE shifts

XPN Network
Feb 22


Apartment No. 129 – A Haunting Premise Lost in a Broken Xbox Port
Apartment No. 129 arrives on Xbox with a premise that should be irresistible to horror fans: a Turkish urban legend wrapped in religious folklore, a cursed apartment block, and a protagonist drawn into a mystery steeped in tragedy. There’s an immediate sense of atmosphere as you step inside the decaying building, with unsettling sound cues, claustrophobic corridors, and a cultural lens rarely explored in mainstream horror. You can feel the ambition, this is a game that wants

XPN Network
Feb 21
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