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Who Are You!? is a narrative-driven first person sci-fi horror game from Haunting Humans Studio. Released March 31, 2026, it plays exclusively on PC. You step into the role of Ray Roswell, a man figuring out 20 years of twisted memories to uncover why his wife vanished and where his daughter is now. The game leans heavily into psychological unease, with shifting environments and fragmented storytelling. It’s not about jump scares but creeping dread and existential questions. Think of it as a haunted house built from human guilt and regret, minus the ghosts, plus a lot of existential dread.
The game feels like wandering through a broken mind. You navigate procedurally generated memory fragments as Ray, using environmental clues to piece together events. Puzzles involve manipulating time-based distortions, like freezing moments to access hidden paths or altering memory layers to reveal alternate truths. Combat is minimal, more about avoiding or outmaneuvering manifestations of Ray’s trauma. Controls are precise but slow, emphasizing deliberate movement. Sessions often stall as you backtrack through nonlinear timelines, which can frustrate but also mirror the protagonist’s disorientation. The lack of a traditional map forces you to rely on contextual hints, making the world feel both alien and intimately personal.
Community ratings sit at 8.7/10, with 68% completing the base story. Average playtime is 14.2 hours, though 35% of players log over 20. Moods are split: 52% “eerie,” 33% “intense,” and 15% “confused.” Critics praise the “unrelenting atmosphere” but gripe about “repetitive puzzle design.” One review on Steam calls it “a masterclass in psychological unease, even if the pacing stumbles.” Achievements focus on memory unlocks and hidden truths, with the elusive “Truth’s Mirror” requiring a 100% completion run. Forums buzz with debates over whether the ending is a resolution or another layer of deception.
Who Are You!? is a bold but flawed experiment in narrative horror. At $49.99, it’s a mid-tier indie buy with a strong emotional core but technical hiccups. The 42 achievements add replay value, though most players won’t finish them all. Best for fans of games like The Vanishing of Ethan Carter or Hellblade who don’t mind slow pacing. Skip it if you crave action or clear answers. The real takeaway? It’s a haunting, if imperfect, mirror for anyone curious how guilt can warp reality.
The story follows Ray Roswell, who lost his wife 20 years ago. Now, his only daughter has gone missing. In his search for her, Ray not only embarks on a physical journey but also confronts the emotional and psychological trauma of his past, reliving the pain he has tried to forget.
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Single player
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