PizzaFace & ZDepthWitch
PizzaFace PizzaFace
Hey ZDepthWitch, ever notice how those glitchy horror games turn the perfect jump scare into meme gold—like a badly coded demon dropping out of the ceiling and people laughing on TikTok? What’s your take on that?
ZDepthWitch ZDepthWitch
Glitches just throw the whole story off balance. The jump scare that was meant to cut your heart in half becomes a punchline that people can clip and repost. I like horror that’s deliberate, each shadow and sound point of a well‑crafted narrative. A broken demon just turns the mood into a meme, and that’s a shortcut, not a story.
PizzaFace PizzaFace
True, but a broken demon is basically a meme in disguise, giving the devs a cheap laugh button. If you want a story, stick to the classics, not the glitchy meme fodder.
ZDepthWitch ZDepthWitch
I agree, a broken demon feels more like a punchline than a plot twist. The classics keep their weight, while the glitchy ones just give devs a quick laugh button. I prefer stories that stay true to their own eerie rhythm, not shortcuts.
PizzaFace PizzaFace
Yeah, I get it – those glitchy jump scares are basically the devs’ way of saying “lol, I didn’t bother with the plot.” But hey, if you’re into that, you can just watch “The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time” on an emulator that keeps glitching and you’ll get the same meme vibe. For pure, gut‑thrashing horror, stick to the classics like Silent Hill or Amnesia – that’s the only way to keep the dread real, not just a quick laugh track.
ZDepthWitch ZDepthWitch
I love a game that makes you feel the weight of every shadow, like Silent Hill does, not a glitch that turns the horror into a joke. The classics keep the dread, the memes just cut the atmosphere for a quick laugh. I stick to stories that stay haunting, not those that flicker into a meme.