Skip to content

Fix Gaming Channel

Indie Game News, Reviews and Developer Interviews

  • Home
  • News
    • Industry News
    • Videos
    • Security & Scam Alerts
  • Indie Spotlight
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
    • Developers
    • Industry insiders
    • Art in Games
  • About Us
    • Support
    • Inside Fix Gaming
    • Contact
  • Fix Access
  • Indie Dev Guides
  • Fix Stories
    • Submit to Fix Stories
  • Toggle search form

Last Guest Review – Indie Horror Game Delivers Suspense, Atmosphere, and Chills

Posted on June 9, 2025June 9, 2025 By Fix Gaming Team

Atmosphere, minimalism, and tension—Last Guest proves a small indie horror game can still rattle your nerves.

Introduction

If you’re searching for an honest Last Guest review, you’re in the right place. From the moment Last Guest begins, it sets the tone for what it wants to be—an eerie, focused horror experience meant to keep you on edge. Despite being a short indie horror game (around 40–50 minutes of gameplay), it manages to pull you in and hold your attention through atmosphere, sound, and a surprising amount of immersion for its size and price.

Sound that Builds Suspense

One of the strongest parts of the experience in this Last Guest review is the sound design. Weather effects and environmental audio are sharp, clear, and well-timed—not distorted or grainy like in some budget horror titles. It’s subtle but effective, doing a lot of heavy lifting in keeping the tension alive from start to finish.

Man stands on the porch of the eerie motel in Last Guest, overlooking the desolate surroundings.

Stepping outside the motel in Last Guest—sometimes the scariest secrets hide in plain sight.

Join Our Newsletter

Stay updated with the latest interviews, previews, and indie gaming news from Fix Gaming Channel.


Visuals That Fit the Tone

What grabbed me right away for this Last Guest review was the visual style. It doesn’t try to be overly bright or stylized—something that ruins the horror vibe in many indie games. Instead, it stays dark, minimal, and consistent, which works in its favor. The design of the opening scenes immediately helped establish the mood.

Simple, Effective Gameplay

Controls are easy to pick up, with helpful prompts appearing just when you need them. You’re not forced to pause the game to figure things out, which helps maintain the pacing and immersion. The lack of a sprint option might frustrate some players, but I get why it was done. Once you understand the game’s rhythm and flow, the slower pace becomes part of the tension.

Focused and Straightforward Storytelling

I really appreciated how the story stayed on track. There are no random side plots pulling you away from the main objective, which helps keep things engaging. It’s a “play at your own pace” kind of game, and that simplicity adds to the tension instead of taking away from it.

View of a dimly lit motel room from Last Guest game, featuring old furniture and atmospheric lighting.

A glimpse of the unsettling motel interior in Last Guest—where every shadow hints at a new secret.

About Last Guest

It’s late, it’s raining, and after a long journey you end up at a rundown highway motel. The only welcoming face is a strange but polite concierge—who warns you to avoid the wall, and especially Room 8. As you settle in for the night, curiosity takes over. What happened here, why does everyone avoid Room 8, and is there really someone—or something—watching from inside?

  • Atmospheric experience—no puzzles, just dialogue and suspense
  • Creepy, detailed motel with unique characters
  • Conversations slowly reveal dark secrets
  • Compact, story-driven (about 30–40 minutes)

Last Guest

Release Date: 28 May, 2025

Genre: Action

Developer/Publisher: Room13Games

Platforms: PC (Steam)

Related Indie Horror Game Review

If you enjoy reading indie horror game reviews, check out our thoughts on Clown Is Hungry—another unsettling experience for horror fans.

Final Thoughts – Last Guest Review

If you enjoy horror games that rely on atmosphere over action, this Last Guest review finds the game is worth checking out. It’s short, simple, and surprisingly effective. While it’s not revolutionary, it delivers on what it promises: anxiety-inducing moments, a few well-placed jump scares, and a dark, focused tone that sticks with you after it’s over. Recommended for horror fans looking for a quick, immersive experience—and for newcomers who want a solid intro to the genre.


Guest review written by Simply Just Me for Fix Gaming Channel

Enjoy our content? Support Fix Gaming Channel with a donation via Buy Me a Coffee . Your support helps us keep independent gaming journalism alive. Thank you!

☕ Support Us

Indie, New Games, Reviews Tags:horror game review, horror games, Indie, indie game, indie horror, Last Guest, PC, Room13Games

Post navigation

Previous Post: Behind the Scenes, Part 2: Why We Keep Going
Next Post: 10 Games Celebrating Their 10-Year Anniversary in 2025

Related Posts

  • Millennium Whisper Game of the Week 32 artwork showing six main characters in colourful panels with the Millennium Whisper logo across the centre and a GOTW #32 calendar icon.
    Game of the Week #32: Millennium Whisper – Ethical AI and 1999 Drama Featured
  • Shape of Dreams Update v1.1 key art showing four heroes and a purple spell-filled battle, with text reading “Available 10 December 2025.”
    Major Shape of Dreams v1.1 Update Enables Mods and Overhauls the Late-game Loop Indie
  • Six Millennium Whisper characters in a colourful grid with the game logo across the centre.
    Millennium Whisper Interview: Ethical AI and Actor-Led Relationships Developers
  • Aaero2: Black Razor Edition key art showing two ships racing on colored trails toward a towering mechanical creature over a ruined cityscape
    Aaero2 Review – Chasing the Perfect Line in a Neon Rhythm Rail Shooter Featured
  • Overkill Squad key art showing a muscular rhino and a squad of gun-toting animal characters battling in a fiery cartoon battlefield.
    Overkill Squad Hits Steam With Chaotic Twin-Stick Action, Launch Discount & Dev Q&A Developers
  • Fix Gaming Channel Indie Game Showcase GOTY 2025 neon stage artwork with Fix Gaming logo
    Fix Gaming Channel Indie Game Showcase 2025 & GOTY Featured
  • Key art for The Last Case of John Morley showing detective John Morley holding a lantern in a dark forest
    The Last Case of John Morley Early impressions Indie
  • Cairn key art showing Aava standing on a rocky ledge, looking up at the glowing summit of Mount Kami
    Cairn launching January 29, 2026 Indie
  • Vampire Dynasty Sinks Its Teeth Into Steam Next Fest With a Playable Demo News
  • Anime hero rides red dragon over neon-lit city in Dragon Spirits 2
    Dragon Spirits 2 One Month Review and Exclusive Game Key Giveaway News
  • Terrifying close-up of a ghostly figure from DeathOmen horror game
    Coming This February “DeathOmen” Survive the Psychological Horror. News
  • Zombie in floral shirt with headset under Welcome to Paradize logo
    Welcome to Paradize Zombie Survival News
  • Official key art from JDM: Japanese Drift Master featuring red and black drift cars on a mountain road with cherry blossoms and the game logo
    JDM: Japanese Drift Master Rolls Out Photo Mode and New Missions in Summer Update Games
  • Dead Island 2 Haus update featuring zombie combat and new expansion artwork
    Ved a New Adventure Awaits in This Hand Drawn Rpg Fantasy News

© 2025 Fix Gaming Channel · Privacy Policy · Terms · Discord · Contact