EMOTIONLESS: The Last Ticket Review – A Dark, Haunting Ride Worth Taking?

An old, run-down amusement park rotting away inside a foggy forest is the perfect staging ground for a nightmare, and this game nails that unsettling mood right out of the gate. You are trapped in the shoes of a bloke dealing with serious trauma, dragged back to this decaying tourist trap year after year in a desperate bid for closure. It is an isolated, deeply creepy experience that relies heavily on you pulling yourself through the dread with zero hand-holding. But beneath that wonderfully grim atmosphere lies a frustrating gauntlet of technical pitfalls that threaten to completely derail the terror.
[Specs] [Gameplay] [Performance] [Settings]


Emotionless: The Last Ticket PS5 Review: Specs & HUD

  • Download Size: A lightweight 6.72GB download size on PlayStation 5.
  • Trophies: Features a Platinum trophy path with 25 trophies to collect.
  • Interaction Cursor: You get a small interaction cursor to help with the puzzles, but it is so tiny it’s basically invisible.
  • HUD Elements: Minimalist approach with no button icon prompts or tutorial markers on screen.
Gert Lush Gaming discovers a dark and foggy horse merry-go-round in EMOTIONLESS : The Last Ticket.

Gameplay Review & Mechanics Breakdown

The core gameplay drops you straight into a first-person action horror layout where you are completely left working it out yourself. There are absolutely no tutorials or button prompts to guide you, which can be massively frustrating at times, but it honestly fits the isolated setting and bleak atmosphere perfectly. You spend your time exploring the foggy terrain, tracking down secrets, and finding audio logs to piece the narrative together. Puzzles are scattered absolutely everywhere and vary quite a bit, even forcing you to step up and take part in some of the actual park amusements to progress.

While wandering alone in the dark works wonders for the tension, the mechanical execution regularly gets in its own way. The story is delivered entirely through your character talking out loud as he explores, but the voice delivery often sounds way more dramatic than the actual discoveries deserve, making the dialogue fall flat or feel totally out of place. Worse yet, you can have a newly discovered audio log playing neatly in the background only for your main character to suddenly start talking right over it, leaving you completely overloaded with audio noise. Toss in a load of annoying invisible walls and the fact that you have to blindly guess where to go without a single breadcrumb to follow, and the gameplay loop becomes a test of patience.

Gert Lush Gaming solves a complex rotating pipe puzzle to direct electricity in EMOTIONLESS : The Last Ticket.

Emotionless: The Last Ticket PS5 Review: Performance & Fidelity

  • Visual Quality: Decent graphics that effectively build a beautifully grim and scary run-down amusement park settled within a forest.
  • Weather & Atmosphere: Excellent use of foggy weather and isolation that makes it a genuinely creepy game, which plays significantly better with headphones wrapped around your ears.
  • Stability Issues: The game suffers from severe stability problems, hitting hard crashes back to the PlayStation 5 dashboard at completely random times.
  • Save System Failure: The save system is completely opaque; you never actually know when the game saves, and a hard crash after getting a fair way into the game forced a complete restart from scratch, even after selecting continue.

Settings, Customisation & Control Details

  • Camera Configurations: Includes a field of view slider, depth of field toggle, smooth camera options, and a head bobbing toggle.
  • Look Options: Standard invert axis toggles and independent sensitivity sliders are present.
  • Audio Controls: Independent audio sliders available for the UI, music, dialogue, effects, and master volume.
  • Text & Language: Dedicated subtitles and language selection settings are included in the menus.
  • Control Limitations: You cannot remap the controls or even look at a controller layout screen to see what the buttons do.
  • Cursor Adjustments: The tiny interaction cursor desperately needs settings to customise its size and visibility, but options are completely missing.
  • Cutscene Management: Cutscenes and story moments are completely in-game, and you cannot skip them, which becomes seriously tedious when a crash forces a total replay.
  • Chapter Select: You can eventually unlock chapters to grant you access to a dedicated chapter select menu.
Gert Lush Gaming tackles a highly detailed lockpicking mechanic inside EMOTIONLESS : The Last Ticket.

Related Gert Lush Gaming Reviews

Emotionless: The Last Ticket PS5 Review

Jim Smale

Graphics
70%
Sound
70%
Accessibility
70%
Length
80%
Fun Factor
80%

Summary

Good Stuff
The atmosphere here is spot on, delivering a beautifully grim and scary run-down amusement park sitting deep inside a dark forest. It is a genuinely creepy game fueled by foggy weather and a heavy sense of isolation that plays brilliantly if you throw a pair of headphones on. Working everything out for yourself with the puzzles and world navigation can be tough, but it genuinely suits the setting and makes the exploration feel rewarding when you discover secrets or get to interact with the broken-down park amusements.

Bad Stuff
The technical state of this launch is incredibly frustrating, highlighted by random hard crashes that boot you straight back to the PS5 dashboard. Because you never know when the game actually saves, a crash can wipe out massive chunks of progress and force you to start the entire game over from the main menu. Having to replay those sections is made even more tedious because the in-game cutscenes are completely unskippable. The exploration is hindered by a tiny interaction cursor that is basically invisible, a complete lack of control remapping or button guides, annoying invisible walls, and an audio design issue where your character aggressively talks over the audio logs you are trying to listen to.

Final Verdict
Emotionless: The Last Ticket has a brilliant, moody horror foundation that is completely dragged down by broken execution. Wandering blind without a breadcrumb map or tutorials fits the vibe, but the lack of basic gameplay polish and customisation options hurts the experience. Worst of all, losing hours of progress to a dashboard crash and being forced to re-watch unskippable scenes is a massive kick in the teeth. It is atmospheric as hell, but you should probably wait for a patch before stepping into this park.

74%

Jim Smale

Gaming since the Atari 2600, I enjoy the weirdness in games counting Densha De Go and RC De Go as my favourite titles of all time. I prefer gaming of old where buying games from a shop was a thing, Being social in person was a thing. Join me as I attempt to adapt to this new digital age!

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