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报告翻译问题
Horror isn't a genre so much as a flavor or theme. There are first person shooter horror games, e.g. Doom 3, F.E.A.R., Killing Floor, S.T.A.L.K.E.R., Metro2033, and of course System Shock 2. Perhaps some of them would be more to your liking, or even other non-horror themed fps.
I don't at all, or at least there's very few things that scare me. It might be an age or situational thing with me though; can't say. Have walked through graveyards at midnight for bets before now.
However, the thing is to best enjoy such games is to try and put that aside - stop thinking "oh this is just a hide and seek game" because you can do a similar trick with ANY game, and resort it to base elements - footie? just a game of pushing a pixellated ball between two sticks. Platformers? Just a case of moving and pushing a button to move your character in a brief jumping motion occasionally. FPS? Just a mouse click over the person you want to obliterate.
Don't sound so impressive when you think of them like that. Try it and see what I mean.
So, for this very reason, I can enjoy and indeed love certain horror games despite not being scared by them at all. Do I still jump occasionally? Sure, but they're not scares and again you can help this by trying to set your mind to be involved with it.
Glad I could be of help :)
Understand that I don't say that I don't scare easily as some sort of badge of honour or boast - I just truly don't, so I can certainly understand what your situation is. To be frank, I envy those that do scare easily.
There is also the other little tricks to help which work for me. I ALWAYS play a scary game in the dark during the early hours of the morning with headphones on. You get the immersion better, and with games even such as EA's Dead Space - the sound design REALLY shines.
Well, you don't have to jump in with both feet.
I think it's worth keeping in mind though, especially if you've had an experience like you did with Outlast, as it really focuses your interest. So, just try lights off first, see how that goes, then move up to when nobody else is about and finally headphones.
Play it gradually and see what works for you - the results can be rewarding, as I've give this advice to many people over the years. It seems to be pretty good.
The game genre doesn't matter much - fps, stealth, adventure, whatever - if it's a setting based on horror I have to play it exactly that way. Headphones on and up, lights off, maybe a nice cool breeze through the room. Having no one around is very effective too because any little sound you might hear in the house makes your imagination run wild, such as normal settling sounds or a mouse in the pantry or a dog barking outside.
It also helps greatly not to watch any 'let's play' or review type videos beforehand as they can really spoil the game by revealing some of the surprises. It's the unknown, after all, that we fear most as humans.
Excellent point.
This is one of the reasons I research a game thoroughly before buying but NEVER watch any revealing game footage.
It would really be sad to spoil amazing games by watching let's plays, especially if the "reviewer" trashtalks it while he plays it. I'm unsure why people do this. Especially with horror gaming because really, you only get one chance to experience those, any replays afterward are never going to be as frightening or immersive.