Waking up in a derelict hospital with nothing but a flashlight and a cryptic note is a classic horror trope, but few games executed it as impressively on handheld hardware as . Originally a 2007 technical marvel for the Nintendo DS, the 2015 Dementium Remastered for the 3DS brought the terrifying hallways of Redmoor back with much-needed polish. A Face-Lift That Actually Bites
Redmoor Hospital Revisited: Why Dementium Remastered is a 3DS Essential
The original DS release was notorious for its punishing "checkpoint starvation" and enemies that would instantly respawn if you left a room. fixed these frustrations by importing the Save Room system from the sequel, giving players a fighting chance to breathe between encounters with screaming floating heads and grotesque "worm" monsters. Why It Still Works
Unlike some remasters that just smooth out edges, Renegade Kid’s 3DS version felt like the definitive vision for the game.
The "crunchy" low-res textures of the DS were replaced with high-quality models and bump-mapping.
It fully utilizes the Circle Pad Pro and the New 3DS C-stick for dual-analog movement and aiming, finally ditching the often-clunky stylus-only aiming of the original. Quality of Life in a House of Death
Waking up in a derelict hospital with nothing but a flashlight and a cryptic note is a classic horror trope, but few games executed it as impressively on handheld hardware as . Originally a 2007 technical marvel for the Nintendo DS, the 2015 Dementium Remastered for the 3DS brought the terrifying hallways of Redmoor back with much-needed polish. A Face-Lift That Actually Bites
Redmoor Hospital Revisited: Why Dementium Remastered is a 3DS Essential Dementium Remastered [Decrypted] 3DS (EUR/USA) ...
The original DS release was notorious for its punishing "checkpoint starvation" and enemies that would instantly respawn if you left a room. fixed these frustrations by importing the Save Room system from the sequel, giving players a fighting chance to breathe between encounters with screaming floating heads and grotesque "worm" monsters. Why It Still Works Waking up in a derelict hospital with nothing
Unlike some remasters that just smooth out edges, Renegade Kid’s 3DS version felt like the definitive vision for the game. fixed these frustrations by importing the Save Room
The "crunchy" low-res textures of the DS were replaced with high-quality models and bump-mapping.
It fully utilizes the Circle Pad Pro and the New 3DS C-stick for dual-analog movement and aiming, finally ditching the often-clunky stylus-only aiming of the original. Quality of Life in a House of Death