

To their excitement, they're invited to a scale replica of the killer's ghastly hotel that doubles as something of a museum where they're promised footage and exclusive background information. After a short flashback, the game jumps to the present day and follows an indie film crew making a documentary about Holmes. Holmes, sometimes dubbed "America's first serial killer." Holmes' "murder castle" was in fact a hotel that he had outfitted to operate as more of a maze of horrific contraptions that could make Jigsaw's works look like Mouse Trap.

The Devil in Me takes us to Chicago, first at the turn of the 1900s to introduce-or, for horror fanatics, more likely remind us of-H.H.

The Devil in Me is Supermassive's latest slasher, and it outshines its predecessors-with a more cohesive plot, best-in-series characters, and a bit of clever gamification injected into the cinematic experience. Results have been mixed across the four released games, but on a steady upward trajectory that does not falter with the latest effort. When The Dark Pictures Anthology was revealed, its promise was immediately obvious: Take the team that gave us the excellent Until Dawn and have it tackle new horror subgenres at a clip of about once per year.
