Horror games on console â PS4, PS5, Nintendo Switch, and Xbox â span a tight spectrum: psychological thrillers, found-footage explorers, jumpscare-driven house clears, and survival horror with limited resources. The Webnetic catalog focuses on the indie end of that spectrum, where short, design-led horror games can deliver a sharper single-evening scare than a 30-hour AAA campaign and cost a fraction of the price.
What to look for when buying horror games on console
Most indie horror titles in the catalog sit in the $1.49â$4.99 range, run between two and six hours, and target a single-player session that finishes in one or two sittings. That is intentional: short-form horror keeps tension honest, because the game cannot pad the experience with side activities. Expect tight corridors, deliberate camera framing, limited save points, sparse ambient audio that does the heavy lifting, and an emphasis on visual storytelling over dense lore dumps. PS5 and Xbox Series X|S titles in the catalog typically target 60 fps with DualSense haptic effects on PS5; Nintendo Switch ports prioritize stable 30 fps and shorter scenes that suit handheld play. Webnetic publishes its own horror titles â Panic House, Panic House 2, and Panic House: Awakening among them â and our editorial team has shipped on the storefronts you are buying from, so the catalog page emphasizes practical buying information: target frame rate, PEGI rating, single-player runtime, and whether the game uses motion controls. We filter out broken stick-drift exploits, cheap repackaged jumpscare clones, and titles flagged by Sony or Nintendo for content concerns. Every horror title page surfaces its PEGI rating, runtime estimate, regional price, and trophy or achievement breakdown so you can compare before you buy. If you are new to the genre on console, start with a short atmospheric piece around $2 to test your tolerance; if you already know you want survival horror with resource management, the catalog sorts by play mode and average runtime so you can find longer titles directly. We update the horror section as new indie horror titles release on the PlayStation Store, Nintendo eShop, and Microsoft Store â typically twice a month.

