Lust From Beyond Chambers — Of Pleasure

One level takes place in a "Feast Hall" where the tables are set with human spines as cutlery, and the wine glasses are filled with a glowing red fluid that moves on its own. The lighting engine is surprisingly robust for an indie horror title, casting long, pulsating shadows that make the walls look like they are breathing. Lust from Beyond: Chambers of Pleasure is not for everyone. It is not even for most people.

Have you braved the Chambers? Or do you think the Lust series is beyond saving? Let us know in the comments below.

Let’s be honest. When you hear the word Lust in a video game title, your brain usually goes one of two places: cheesy visual novels or edgy shock jock horror. For many, the Lust from Beyond trilogy has lived in the latter category—often dismissed as "that game for people who thought Agony was too subtle." Lust from Beyond Chambers of Pleasure

If you are looking for jump scares, play Outlast . If you are looking for deep stealth mechanics, play Alien: Isolation .

7.5/10 (A flawed masterpiece of discomfort) One level takes place in a "Feast Hall"

But with the release of (a standalone expansion/DLC), developer Movie Games Lunarium has done something unexpected. They’ve stopped trying to shock you and started trying to unsettle you.

It is ugly, beautiful, and deeply uncomfortable. And in a horror landscape full of safe jumpscares, that makes it a hidden gem. It is not even for most people

If the base game was a splatter-painted scream, Chambers of Pleasure is a whisper in a locked room. Here is why this niche horror expansion deserves your attention, even if the original wasn't your cup of hemlock. First, let’s clear the air. The original Lust from Beyond had a notoriously rocky launch due to platform censorship. The "controversial" content felt neutered. Chambers of Pleasure operates as an "Unrated" chapter. It doesn't just add nudity for the sake of it; it restores the context .

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