Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. News

'The Evil Within 2' could be the scariest game revealed at E3 2017

Add as a preferred source on Google

Bethesda announced a sequel to Shinji Mikami’s 2014 horror game The Evil Within at E3. Rumors about the project have been circulating for several weeks prior, after a related job description was posted to the internet, but now the title has been officially confirmed via a chilling reveal trailer.

The trailer reintroduced the character of Sebastian Castellanos from the first game, as well as the shadowy Mobius organization. Soon enough, Castellanos is forced to return to STEM, a machine that’s capable of merging several minds into one — with some pretty unsettling effects.

Recommended Videos

Castellanos’ journey starts off with a recreation of the fire that killed his daughter, and things only get worse from there. He is trapped in a depraved art gallery where corpses hang from the ceiling in bags, and a mechanical monster begins scuttling up and down the walls, no doubt with malicious intent.

The clip then returns to another scene featuring Castellanos’ daughter, who finds herself among a group of horribly mutated humans. A man standing at the head of the group summons flames that engulf her body. The trailer ends with quick cuts of some of the monsters players will face in the game — and they’re as varied as they are horrible.

Horror games are back in vogue at the minute, thanks in no small part to the refreshing first-person action of Resident Evil 7. Mikami has played a huge role in the success of the Resident Evil franchise, so it’ll certainly be interesting to see how The Evil Within 2 develops some of the ideas at play in the first game.

The Evil Within 2 is set to make its debut on October 13, 2017 — which just so happens to be Friday the 13th. Mikami’s latest slice of nightmarish horror action is set to be made available across PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and PC.

Keep up to date with the latest E3 announcements and reveals here.

Brad Jones
Brad is an English-born writer currently splitting his time between Edinburgh and Pennsylvania. You can find him on Twitter…
Black Ops and Black Ops 2 PS5 ports could cost $80 before DLC
The rumored price for these classic Call of Duty ports is hard to defend
Adult, Male, Man

Call of Duty fans were understandably excited when Treyarch confirmed that Black Ops and Black Ops 2 are coming to modern PlayStation consoles in July. Both games are among the most beloved entries in the series, and PlayStation players have been locked out of easy access to them for years unless they still had older hardware.

That excitement may not last if the latest pricing clues are accurate. As pointed out by Call of Duty tracker CharlieIntel (via Gaming Bible), Black Ops and Black Ops 2 recently received store updates on PC and Xbox. Each base game is now listed at $40, individual DLC packs cost $10 each, season passes are priced at $30, and microtransaction camos or personalization packs are now free.

Read more
Can an ice machine cool an Nvidia RTX GPU at gaming? A wild mod job proves it can
An ice machine helped cool an RTX 3060 to just 22 degrees in Cyberpunk 2077
Computer Hardware, Electronics, Hardware

A countertop ice machine is not exactly standard PC hardware, but YouTuber TrashBench has shown that it can be turned into a surprisingly effective GPU cooler. In a new video, the creator used an ice maker as the basis for a custom cooling setup for an Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060, and the results were far better than expected.

The project was inspired by another creator, Mr. Yeester, who used an ice machine to cool a CPU. TrashBench took the concept in a different direction by trying to cool a graphics card with the machine itself, rather than simply dumping ice into a loop.

Read more
Epic is improving its game launcher with a long overdue speed boost and plenty of new features
Epic Games Store Launcher V2 could finally address years of user complaints
epic games logo

Epic Games has spent years trying to make the Epic Games Store a serious rival to Steam. It has given away free games, signed exclusivity deals, and kept major PC releases such as Borderlands 3, Assassin’s Creed Mirage, and The Lord of the Rings: Return to Moria away from Valve’s storefront at launch. Those moves have helped Epic build an audience, but they have not been enough to seriously threaten Steam’s position as the default PC gaming platform.

One problem has been the launcher itself. Earlier this year, an Epic executive admitted to Eurogamer that the launcher “sucks,” and the company now appears to be working on a much bigger fix. According to slides from an Unreal Fest presentation shared by LuKaOnIndeed on X, Epic is developing Launcher V2, a ground-up rebuild of the Epic Games Store launcher that is supposed to be much faster and easier to use.

Read more