Help me find a 2010s sci-fi horror game set on a space station with multiple endings

I’m trying to remember this indie game I played a while back. It was a first-person horror game with a sci-fi twist. The whole thing took place on a space station, I think.

Here’s what I recall:

  • It came out sometime in the mid-2010s
  • There were these creepy metal busts all over the station
  • Turns out they were actually people turned into computers
  • I remember a scene where you mess up their power and they all start screaming
  • The game had at least two endings:
    1. You become one of those computer people
    2. You turn into one of the monsters chasing you

In that second ending, you’re strapped to a table and get injected with stuff. You see yourself changing from first-person view. It was pretty wild.

Anyone know what game this might be? It’s driving me crazy that I can’t remember the name!

SOMA was intense! The underwater setting added a whole new level of claustrophobia. Those robot-human things still give me the creeps when I think about them. The endings were pretty mind-bending too. Definitely one of the more unique horror games I’ve played.

SOMA’s definitely stuck with a lot of people.

The underwater setting really cranks up the isolation.

That game asks some deep questions about consciousness and identity.

Man, SOMA was a trip. That game really got under my skin with its existential horror vibe. The way it blurred the lines between human and machine was seriously unsettling. I remember feeling so uneasy about those robot-human hybrids. And those endings? Talk about messing with your head. Definitely stands out as one of the more thought-provoking horror games I’ve played in recent years.

Sounds like SOMA by Frictional Games. That game messed with my head big time. The atmosphere was so tense and the story really made you think. Those robot-human hybrids were seriously creepy. Loved how your choices actually affected the ending too.

SOMA’s a wild ride for sure.

Those robot-human things freak me out every time.

The endings really make you think about what it means to be human.