The Cabin Factory: Danger or Clear? A Paranormal Production Line

Step into the fluorescent hum and uncanny silence of The Cabin Factory, where every corridor dares you to trust your instincts. This psychological horror experience invites players to inspect eerie cabins for signs of haunting, an anomaly-hunting gauntlet wrapped in liminal dread. In this in-depth exploration, you’ll press “danger” or “clear” with trembling certainty, knowing one wrong call could cost you everything. Inspired by cult classics like P.T. and The Exit 8, this short-form thriller distils fear into a 60-minute descent through shifting shadows and unsettling stillness.

A dimly lit interior in The Cabin Factory where a chair and table barely emerge from the darkness.

The Cabin Factory Review Pros

  • Decent graphics. 
  • 2.44GB download size. 
  • Ten trophies. 
  • Video settings – gamma slider. 
  • Audio sliders for – master volume, and audio language. 
  • Subtitles can be turned on and off, and you can change the size of the text with a slider. 
  • Gameplay settings – language, audio language, camera sensitivity, Invert axis, hold to sprint, show Crosshair, and amen head bob intensity slider. (You can turn off the head bib entirely.) 
  • First-person view. 
  • Haunted cabin inspection gameplay. 
  • The game is that you play an inspector and have to inspect cabins and see if they are haunted. 
  • Cabins are randomised, and this includes the contents, items within the hut, the appearance, etc. 
  • It’s a very scary game as it preys on familiarity; little movements or placements can really creep you out. 
  • Familiar controls, and they are simple enough not to cause issues. 
  • 3D game world, and you have 360-degree camera control. 
  • As you progress, you start getting story snippets or new rooms open, and you encounter other people or other entities. 
  • The goal of the game is to correctly inspect 8 cabins in a row. 
  • When you exit a cabin, you have two buttons – clear and danger. Clear is no bad stuff, and red means there is badness in the house. 
  • You can have many different experiences, like being chased, stuff moving, new items, even footsteps or hissing, that can set you off. 
  • The game can surprise you with what happens in and out of the cabin. 
  • To ascertain if a house is indeed haunted, it’s when that individual cabin has changed in some way, or something pronounced happened. 
  • It’s a dark game overall; the gamma slider can help, but honestly, the darker the better, as it really gets to you. 
  • This game has excellent, creepy on-edge vibes and atmosphere. 
  • Best played with headphones, and with the lights down. 
  • I was surprised how much I kept coming back and how much fun it was to play, weird to say but it gets addictive, always wanting to see the next story bit. 

The Cabin Factory control panel showing simple gameplay instructions on the production line.

The Cabin Factory Review Cons

  • No Platinum trophy. 
  • I did find sometimes what I thought was a danger sign wasn’t, it’s like sounds can sometimes be different. 
  • You cannot remap the controls. 
  • Bare minimum game settings and doesn’t offer a lot. 
  • Once you have seen it all, the game doesn’t have much replayability. 

Related Post: Bye Sweet Carole Hops Between Horror and Heart

A disturbing scene in The Cabin Factory showing a teddy or boy under a towel beside a glowing TV.

The Cabin Factory

Official Website: 

Developer: International Cat Studios

Publisher: Future Friends Games

Store Link:

PlayStation

The Cabin Factory Review

Jim Smale

Graphics
70%
Sound
80%
Accessibility
80%
Length
80%
Fun Factor
90%

Summary

The Cabin Factory – The Thrills and Highlights of Gameplay:
The Cabin Factory delivers a psychological horror experience where players step into eerie cabins and decide if they are haunted. You play as an inspector tasked with pressing either danger or clear, knowing one wrong call could cost everything. Cabins randomise with shifting items, appearances, and unsettling movements, keeping you constantly on edge. The gameplay thrives on familiarity, with small changes like footsteps or hissing sounds creating genuine fear. With first-person exploration, 360-degree camera control, and the goal of correctly inspecting eight cabins in a row, the game builds addictive tension that keeps you coming back for more.

The Cabin Factory – Where It Falls Short: Key Negatives:
Despite its thrills, The Cabin Factory has drawbacks. There is no Platinum trophy, controls cannot be remapped, and the overall settings are bare minimum. Sounds can sometimes mislead, making danger signs unclear, and once you have seen everything, replayability is limited. These shortcomings prevent the game from reaching its full potential.

The Cabin Factory – Immersive Story and Narrative Elements:
As you progress through The Cabin Factory, story snippets emerge, new rooms open, and encounters with other people or entities add depth. The narrative unfolds gradually, rewarding persistence with unsettling revelations. This short-form thriller distils fear into a 60-minute descent, inspired by cult classics like P.T. and The Exit 8, making the story experience both chilling and addictive.

The Cabin Factory – Visual and Performance Aspects:
The Cabin Factory offers decent graphics with a 2.44GB download size and a 3D world that supports full camera control. Video settings include a gamma slider to adjust darkness, while audio sliders and subtitle options enhance accessibility. The atmosphere is best experienced with headphones and lights down, amplifying the creepy vibes. Though performance is solid, the lack of advanced settings limits customisation.

The Cabin Factory – Overall Verdict: Is It Worth Playing?:
The Cabin Factory succeeds in creating a tense, addictive horror atmosphere that preys on instinct and familiarity. While its limited replayability and minimal settings hold it back, the game’s haunting gameplay loop and immersive story make it a worthwhile experience for fans of psychological horror. It is a dark, unsettling ride that rewards players who embrace its eerie challenge.

Back of the Box Quotes:
“The Cabin Factory turns every inspection into a chilling test of instinct.”

80%

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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