Look, I said that the last one would be the last indie horror game, and what I meant was, it was the last horror game with no budget. Steel Wool Studios is an independent developer, but they’ve got Scott Cawthon money to make their games with.
- Release year: 2025
- Developer: Steel Wool Studios
- Platform: PlayStation, PC
No lies, I’m a dyed-in-the-wool FNAF fanboy. This was always going to happen. But I think, more than anything, the leap in quality over Security Breach is what is securing Secret of the Mimic‘s place on this list. I don’t even have words for how much better this game is than its older brother. Like, Security Breach was almost as much of a dumpster fire as Cyberpunk 2077, and Secret of the Mimic is improved significantly in every single way.
Secret of the Mimic does a very ballsy thing and strips away years upon years of FNAF lore to take place as the very first game in the timeline. You play as a poorly-treated Fazbear Entertainment technician, assigned to retrieve something seemingly quite valuable from the run-down old headquarters of a competing mascot company, Murray’s Costume Manor. Over the course of the game, you’ll learn that the place isn’t quite as abandoned as it first seems, and slowly unravel what happened to MCM and how it ties into the greater FNAF canon.
The gameplay is kind of like a Metroidvania Lite, with a little bit of puzzle solving, a sprinkle of mini-games, several hide-and-seek sections, and a number of harrowing chase sequences. So, Resident Evil 7 without any guns. It keeps things fresh by always throwing something new at you, and I appreciate that you’re generally pretty free to explore the Manor at your leisure. It’s a pretty small map, but it never feels that way because it’s very tightly designed, and there are so many details and secrets to find all over the place.
Now, let’s talk lore. That’s what you come to the FNAF series for more than anything, right? Don’t get me wrong, Secret of the Mimic was a blast to play, but this is the kind of game where I’m much more invested in the audio logs and documents scattered about. And Secret of the Mimic does not disappoint! Where Security Breach barely told a story at all, Secret of the Mimic nails it, and re-contextualizes so many things that to call it mind-blowing would be an understatement. And the penultimate sequence, when you find yourself in the you-know-where? Muah! The fanservice is strong with this one.
All in all, Five Nights at Freddy’s: Secret of the Mimic was a very satisfying game. The world was interesting and fun to explore, the story was as wild as ever, and the animatronics became genuinely terrifying again. It was more than I expected, though to be fair, my expectations weren’t exactly high. But it was a great time, and I look forward to someday finally taking the time to find all the collectibles and get the secret ending.
