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High School Horror: Top 20 Video Games Featuring Teens, Terror, and Twisted Fun

1-20

Ignacio Weil Ignacio Weil
Gaming - May 13th 2025, 19:02 GMT+2
The Classrooms

The Classrooms (2023)

Ever wondered what it would be like to be trapped in a procedurally generated school full of shadowy horrors and… outdated projector carts? The Classrooms takes your average back-to-school nightmare and cranks it to eleven, blending surrealism, psychological dread, and analog horror into a sandbox of weirdness. Each playthrough is a fresh descent into madness, complete with randomized jump scares and shifting layouts that feel like your school anxiety dreams came to life. You don’t know what’s lurking in the hallway – and that’s half the fun. Or half the trauma. This game isn’t just about escape; it’s about confronting your inner freshman fears... and possibly a cursed mascot. | © Moon Mode

WORLD OF HORROR

World of Horror (2020)

Inspired by Junji Ito’s nightmarish manga and the aesthetics of early Macintosh games, World of Horror is like a creepy history lesson in Japanese folklore – if that lesson also included tentacled gods and sanity-shattering mysteries. Set in a seaside town on the brink of apocalypse, you play as brave (or foolish) teens trying to stop Old Gods from returning. It’s a roguelike adventure dripping with dread and cosmic vibes, where every decision could mean the difference between survival and being consumed by a refrigerator. The game's 1-bit art style oozes nostalgic charm, and the writing is weirdly poetic in a “we’re all doomed” sort of way. Don’t expect hand-holding; expect horror – lots of it. | © Panstasz

Cropped The Coma 2 Vicious Sisters

The Coma 2: Vicious Sisters (2020)

High school is rough. Now imagine your school is a portal to a shadow realm ruled by a demonic teacher who really doesn’t like you skipping class. The Coma 2 is a stylish Korean survival-horror adventure where you sneak through cursed school halls, hide from supernatural baddies, and uncover a story richer than your GPA. With its hand-drawn art and slick side-scrolling gameplay, the game feels like a graphic novel came to terrifying life. You’re constantly hunted, which means you’ll spend more time in lockers than you did during your actual high school years. Trust no one. Except maybe the vending machines. | © Devespresso Games

Harthorn

Harthorn (2020)

In Harthorn, you’re a high schooler stuck in a school over winter break – because nothing says “festive season” like isolation and increasingly creepy events. This indie horror gem leans heavily into atmosphere, with its slow-burn tension and eerie audio cues making you question every flickering light and whispering hallway. The school feels almost alive, and that’s not a compliment. There’s a growing sense of dread that something – or someone – is watching, and the game masterfully blurs the line between reality and delusion. While the scares aren’t always in-your-face, the psychological horror creeps in like a cold draft under the classroom door. Just like calculus, you won’t understand everything, but you’ll still feel haunted. | © Charlie Behan

Kraken Academy

Kraken Academy!! (2021)

Welcome to Kraken Academy!!, where the student body is bizarre, the faculty is probably cursed, and your only hope for saving the world lies with a very opinionated magical kraken. This isn’t horror in the traditional sense, but it’s got just enough weird cults, time loops, and sentient broccoli to make you think, “Maybe I am in danger.” It’s part RPG, part visual novel, and 100% absurd in the best way possible. You’ll investigate conspiracies, join clubs (even the creepy ones), and reset time like a well-dressed teenage Groundhog Day. It’s quirky, colorful chaos, and while you won’t scream in fear, you might laugh nervously as the music teacher summons the apocalypse. | © Happy Broccoli Games

Saiko no sutoka msn

Saiko no Sutoka (2021)

Ah yes, nothing like being hunted by your obsessive, knife-wielding yandere classmate to really spice up your high school routine. In Saiko no Sutoka, you're trapped in a school with Saiko, who’s part stalker, part psychopath, and 100% unhinged. The tension here is real – not just because she's trying to murder you, but because she actually talks to you while she’s doing it, like some twisted slasher ASMR. The game’s cat-and-mouse dynamic is nerve-wracking in the best way, with randomized behaviors and an unpredictable AI that keeps you constantly on edge. You’ll never look at a pair of school shoes in a hallway the same way again. And the worst part? She's kind of charming. | © Habupain

Last year msn

Last Year (2018)

Take a group of teenagers, stick them in a classic horror movie setting, and throw in a shapeshifting killer – Last Year is basically your favorite slasher film turned into a multiplayer survival game. It’s five players versus one killer, and unlike your average group project, teamwork actually matters. Each teen has a role – Healer? Check. Builder? Yup. Guy-who-panics-and-dies-first? Probably. The tension escalates fast, especially since the killer can teleport between spawn points, turning every locker or hallway into a potential death trap. It’s fast-paced, campy, and surprisingly strategic. Just like high school itself, except with more bear traps. | © Elastic Games

Monster Prom

Monster Prom (2018)

Not all high school horror involves blood and guts – sometimes it’s just dating a werewolf who’s too into sports. Monster Prom is a chaotic, hilarious multiplayer dating sim where you try to score a prom date with one of several supernatural classmates. The tone is unapologetically absurd, with branching storylines that range from awkward to downright deranged (and often both). Will you win over the party ghost with your bold fashion choices? Or impress the demon prince with your entrepreneurship skills? Who knows! But one thing's certain: prom has never been this weird or wonderful. This is high school romance, monster-style. | © Beautiful Glitch

Baldis Basics Plus

Baldi's Basics in Education and Learning (2018)

Math class was always a little scary, but Baldi's Basics turns that fear into full-blown existential terror. What starts as a goofy, retro-styled edutainment parody quickly devolves into a surreal survival horror game where a bald teacher hunts you down for getting math problems wrong. And trust me, you will get them wrong. Between the weird sound design, low-poly visuals, and the constant slapping of Baldi’s ruler, it feels like a fever dream that somehow escaped your old CD-ROM drive. Equal parts funny and frightening, this game teaches one lesson very well: always bring a quarter. | © Basically Games

Cropped The Coma Recut

The Coma: Recut (2017)

This is where it all started – or got recut, at least. The Coma: Recut is a remastered version of the original Korean cult horror title, and it’s the first time international players got a proper taste of Sehwa High's twisted underworld. You play as Youngho, a student who falls asleep during exams (relatable) and wakes up in a nightmarish version of his school (less relatable). The teachers want you dead, the hallways are drenched in shadow, and hiding in bathroom stalls becomes a valid survival strategy. It’s moody, suspenseful, and full of that creeping dread that says, “You forgot to do your homework – and also, a demon is chasing you.” | © Devespresso Games

Monika Doki Doki Literature Club

Doki Doki Literature Club (2017)

Welcome to your new favorite dating sim – except it’s not. Doki Doki Literature Club starts off as a pastel-colored visual novel full of cute anime girls, awkward poetry, and light flirtation. But give it some time (and maybe a few bad endings), and you’ll find yourself in a fourth-wall-shattering psychological horror show that leaves you questioning your choices – and your sanity. It’s less “find love at school” and more “watch the game peel itself apart while smiling sweetly.” DDLC is infamous for subverting expectations and punishing complacency. Pro tip: if the game warns you it’s not for the faint of heart, believe it. | © Team Salvato

Detention

Detention (2017)

In Detention, you're not just navigating a haunted school – you’re walking through the dark corridors of Taiwan’s real-life martial law era. This atmospheric side-scrolling horror game is heavy on symbolism, suspense, and sorrow, and it’s the kind of game that trades cheap scares for deeply unsettling dread. You’ll unravel mysteries, dodge vengeful spirits, and piece together a tragic story that’s as political as it is paranormal. It’s a rare blend of history and horror that manages to educate and unnerve in equal measure. Think of it as AP History meets Silent Hill, and yes – there will be a quiz (of emotions). | © RedCandleGames

Dreadout msn

DreadOut (2014)

If Fatal Frame had a little sister who preferred her smartphone to an old-school camera, it’d be DreadOut. This Indonesian horror game lets you step into the shoes of high schooler Linda, who, along with her classmates, stumbles into a ghost-infested town that’s been abandoned by logic and overrun with Southeast Asian folklore. The catch? Your only weapon is your phone – and it’s only useful if you dare look through it. Between creepy rituals, possessed dolls, and boss fights that feel like Instagram gone wrong, DreadOut makes you think twice about school trips... or selfies. | © Digital Happiness

Lollipop Chainsaw Re POP 1

Lollipop Chainsaw (2012)

If bubblegum pop, excessive gore, and high school spirit had a wild night together, Lollipop Chainsaw would be the result. You play as Juliet Starling, a cheerleader with a chainsaw, a zombie-hunting family, and a decapitated boyfriend dangling from her hip. It’s a game that knows exactly how ridiculous it is and leans into it hard – with candy-colored carnage, over-the-top villains, and a sense of humor so cheeky it practically winks at you. Think grindhouse meets pep rally, with a killer soundtrack and more glitter than a spirit week parade. Also, the chainsaw does sparkles. Enough said. | © Grasshopper Manufacture

Danganronpa

Danganronpa (2010)

Welcome to Hope’s Peak Academy, where the best and brightest students are locked in a murder game run by a sadistic teddy bear. Danganronpa is part murder mystery, part courtroom drama, and part psychological mind trip – and it somehow works perfectly. Each chapter follows the classic whodunit formula, but the stakes are life and death, and the suspects are your “classmates” who might be plotting your demise over lunch. The game is bursting with personality, dramatic twists, and plenty of moments that’ll make you shout at your screen. Trust no one. Especially not the bear. | © Spike Chunsoft

Obscure II

Obscure 2 (2007)

Obscure 2, also known as Obscure: The Aftermath, is what happens when high school trauma follows you straight to college – and brings monsters. This sequel picks up years after the original, with a new batch of hormone-fueled students stumbling into botanical horror and nightmarish biology experiments. The enemies are grotesque, the weapons are makeshift, and the dialogue is exactly what you'd expect from 2000s-era teen horror (bless it). What it lacks in polish, it makes up for in charm – and co-op chaos. Honestly, surviving group projects should’ve been enough; now we’re fighting plant zombies too? | © Hydravision Entertainment

Obscure

Obscure (2004)

Before Until Dawn and Dead by Daylight made teens-in-peril fashionable again, there was Obscure. This under-the-radar gem threw a Breakfast Club cast into a school filled with mutated faculty and lots of “you probably shouldn't go in there” vibes. With local co-op and a unique character-switching system, Obscure was way ahead of its time – plus, it wasn’t afraid to kill off your favorite character mid-cutscene (rude). Creepy lighting, creepy teachers, creepy everything – it’s like detention but with more blood and less algebra. And yes, the soundtrack slaps. | © Hydravision Entertainment

FATAL FRAME

Fatal Frame (2001)

What’s scarier than a ghost? A ghost you have to look at to defeat. In Fatal Frame, you play as a teenage girl exploring a haunted mansion with nothing but an antique camera as your weapon. It’s unsettling in that quiet, elegant way – ghosts just kind of appear out of nowhere, and you have to face them head-on to capture their souls (and hopefully not scream in the process). The game popularized “ghost photography combat” before that was even a phrase, and it’s still terrifying decades later. A classic example of how less is more – especially when “less” means no flashlight and more means haunted dolls. | © Tecmo

White Day A Labyrinth Named School

White Day: A Labyrinth Named School (2001)

Forget Valentine’s Day – White Day is about creeping through pitch-black corridors while being hunted by a murderous janitor and supernatural terrors that don’t care about your love life. Originally released in Korea and later remade for a wider audience, this cult favorite is dripping with atmosphere, jump scares, and a story that plays out like a ghost-infested K-drama. As a student sneaking into school to leave a gift for your crush, you somehow end up unraveling ancient curses and dodging death by mop. It’s tense, rewarding, and surprisingly romantic – in a “we might die together” sort of way. | © Sonnori

Corpse Party

Corpse Party (1996)

Ah, the one that started it all – literally. Corpse Party was originally made in RPG Maker, proving you don’t need fancy graphics to leave players emotionally scarred. What begins as a cutesy school ritual to celebrate friendship turns into a full-blown interdimensional horror show, complete with vengeful spirits, haunted hallways, and way too many dead kids. It’s brutal, it’s bleak, and it pulls no punches. The game spawned remakes, sequels, and a full-blown franchise, but the original still hits hardest – probably because it catches you off guard with how far it’s willing to go. Lesson learned: never trust a paper charm. | © Team GrisGris

1-20

From haunted classrooms to monstrous prom dates, the high school experience has never been this terrifying – or this entertaining. In this curated list, we dive into 20 unforgettable video games that explore the chaos, fear, and drama of teenage life in settings where survival is far from guaranteed. Whether you're looking for spine-chilling horror, eerie mysteries, or quirky, supernatural romance, these titles deliver unique narratives with a youthful twist. Perfect for fans of teen-focused horror and offbeat storytelling, this list covers everything from cult classics to modern indie gems.

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From haunted classrooms to monstrous prom dates, the high school experience has never been this terrifying – or this entertaining. In this curated list, we dive into 20 unforgettable video games that explore the chaos, fear, and drama of teenage life in settings where survival is far from guaranteed. Whether you're looking for spine-chilling horror, eerie mysteries, or quirky, supernatural romance, these titles deliver unique narratives with a youthful twist. Perfect for fans of teen-focused horror and offbeat storytelling, this list covers everything from cult classics to modern indie gems.

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