Wraith: The Oblivion – Afterlife

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Wraith: The Oblivion – Afterlife
Designer(s)
Daniel Kihlgren Kallander
Programmer(s)Casper Renman
SeriesWraith: The Oblivion
Platform(s)
Release
  • Oculus Quest & Rift
  • April 22, 2021
  • Steam VR
  • May 25, 2021
  • PlayStation VR
  • October 27, 2021
  • PICO 4
  • March 3, 2023
Genre(s)Survival horror

Wraith: The Oblivion – Afterlife is a

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The player takes the role of a wraith that has recently died, as they explore the Barclay Mansion and uncover mysteries of the afterlife. It is made as an exploration of what it means to be human, and is influenced by the horror in games like Amnesia: The Dark Descent and Alien: Isolation.

Gameplay

A screenshot of first-person gameplay, showing the player hiding from a character in a dimly illuminated scene.
The game takes place in a mansion, and focuses on first-person exploration and stealth.

Wraith: The Oblivion – Afterlife is a survival horror video game played with a virtual reality (VR) headset. The game is narrative-driven, and is focused on exploration and stealth in a first-person perspective;[1][2][3][4] although not a focus of the game, it also features combat.[3]

The player takes the role of a wraith,[5] who grows and gains new abilities as they explore the game world,[3] which can be used to interact physically with the environment.[3][6] Abilities include wraithgrasp, allowing the player to manipulate objects from a distance and to change their environment; sharpened senses, allowing them to hear whispers in the distance and to track other spirits; and insubstantiality, allowing them to walk through walls.[5]

Synopsis

The game is set in the modern Barclay Mansion in the World of Darkness, an urban fantasy setting shared with games including Vampire: The Masquerade and Werewolf: The Apocalypse, where monsters secretly exist within human society.[1][7] The story follows a recently dead person's spirit in the Shadowlands – a reflection of the land of the living, where the dead exist unseen, side by side with the living[5] – who uncovers mysteries of the afterlife after having died in the mansion,[8][3] including the reason for their death.[5]

In the beginning of the game, the protagonist awakes without remembering how they died, and is guided into the mansion by their shadow[3] – a sinister voice representing a wraith's self-destructive aspects and dark subconscious.[3][5] As they explore the mansion, they meet other apparitions and specters.[5]

Development

Afterlife is developed by the Swedish studio Fast Travel Games, and is directed by Erik Odeldahl,[1] designed by Daniel Kihlgren Kallander, and programmed by Casper Renman.[6] It is based on White Wolf Publishing's 1994 tabletop role-playing game Wraith: The Oblivion;[1] and is the first time World of Darkness is adapted as a VR game.[7] It is however still designed to be accessible to players who are new to Wraith: The Oblivion and World of Darkness, intended to be enjoyable by fans of story-driven horror in general and serving as an introduction to the setting.[6]

Odeldahl was influenced by horror games like Amnesia: The Dark Descent (2010) and Alien: Isolation (2014), and felt that their type of horror would work well in a VR game;[1] the developers described the horror design as psychological and "under-your-skin" rather than reliant on jump scares.[6] Odeldahl had wanted to create this in the form of a World of Darkness game, and thought that Wraith: The Oblivion was particularly well suited, due to its mystique and the richness of its setting.[1] The particulars of VR influenced the game's design: whereas other exploration-based games often let the player find and read documents throughout the game world as a way to learn backstory, this would be less doable in a VR game. The developers also found that cinematic cutscenes do not normally work well in VR, and had to find another way of handling them.[3]

Although Paradox Interactive, the owner of the World of Darkness series, were the ones who approached Fast Travel Games about developing a Wraith: The Oblivion game, Odeldahl had thought about adapting Wraith before, and had written a concept document for a Wraith video game adaptation when Fast Travel Games was formed, although Afterlife ended up using a different concept.[6] As he saw Wraith: The Oblivion as being about personal horror, this was also used as the starting point for Afterlife's story,[6] with the game seeking to explore what it means to be human by letting the player take the perspective of a monster.[1] The game is not designed to follow all gameplay rules from the tabletop game, but does use its lore.[6]

The game was announced in June 2020 with a teaser trailer, and was unveiled at

SteamVR release is planned to follow on May 25, 2021, and a PlayStation 4 version later in 2021. The game has support for the headsets HTC Vive, Oculus Rift, Oculus Quest, PlayStation VR, and Valve Index.[5][9][10]

Reception