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August 23, 2017

Distrust

Distrust
6.2
metacritic
Based on 5 Reviews
75
Release date
August 23, 2017
Developer
Publisher
Genre
Platform
PC
Web-site

Summary

A helicopter crash left a group of explorers stranded near an Arctic base. As they try to find a way back, all they are doing is sinking deeper into a nightmare scenario. When they sleep, they attract a terrifying force that sucks the life out of their bodies, but the longer they battle exhaustion and stay awake, the less likely they are to survive... As the survivors try to sleep just enough to stave off fatigue without dying, they slowly go mad and eventually reach the point where they can no longer trust their senses. In time, they can't even tell the difference between reality and a hallucination. Guide the survivors through a randomly generated Arctic base, overcome the severe climate and fight the unfathomable.

Distrust System Requirements

🤏 Minimum Requirements

OS:
Windows 7/8/10
CPU:
Intel Core i3 560 3.33GHz or higher
RAM:
4 GB RAM
GPU:
GeForce 9600 GT/Radeon HD 3870 (512 MB
HDD:
2 GB available space

👍 Recommended Specs

OS:
Windows 7/8/10
CPU:
Intel Core i5 2.6+ GHz
RAM:
4 GB RAM
GPU:
GeForce GTX 460/Radeon HD 6850 (1GB)
HDD:
2 GB available space

Distrust Trailer

Distrust Screenshots13

Critic Reviews5

70
Do not trust anyone nor yourself! With such philosophy, you will fight in the survival action from the Arctic, where snow and frost are not surprisingly the biggest problem. Distrust plays nicely with human psyche, offers the movie mood in a generated environment. Surprisingly however, you yawn sometimes.
September 18, 2017
The survival aspect of the game saved my opinion on it. It was a very bitter beginning and I had to get passed a bit of frustration with the comparison to The Thing despite being nothing remotely inspired by it other than the location. As a survival game, Distrust is enjoyable and challenging even when I feel the enemies aren't all that exciting.
September 14, 2017
Distrust is pretty top-notch stuff. It’s the sign of intelligent and well-considered mechanics that something as inherently repetitive as Distrust never once felt tedious to me. Russian publisher Alawar previously gave us last year’s Beholder, a similarly high-concept little gem from their home country. This makes them two-for-two on Steam releases, and I can’t wait to see what other fascinating indies they bring us from their side of the world.
September 11, 2017

Users Reviews0

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