Taiwanese developer Softstar Entertainment has announced a first-person horror game, Junji Ito Maniac: An Infinite Gaol. The adaptation is based on the horror master’s anime series Junji Ito Maniac: Japanese Tales of the Macabre. While details are limited at this time, it has been confirmed that the game will release on PC.
In the game, players assume the role of a college student who has lost their memory and finds themselves mysteriously trapped in a sinister Western-style mansion. With only a broken smartphone and scattered memories as clues, players must navigate a residence filled with strange statues and hidden traps. Danger lies in wait at every turn.

Alongside two companions, players unravel the mansion’s cryptic secrets while caught in a web of trust and suspicion. As the narrative unfolds, terrifying and iconic phenomena—such as floating balloon heads and creeping, uncontrollable black hair—begin to manifest, gradually enveloping the mansion in terror and eroding the characters’ grip on reality.
Players must piece together fragmented memories and environmental clues to uncover the mansion’s dark truth and confront an unrelenting cycle of horror from which there may be no escape.
According to the development team, the game not only features classic characters from Junji Ito’s works but also includes faithfully recreated scenes from the original anime, which greatly enhances the immersion for players, offering an experience that combines well-known horror elements with a brand-new, unsettling vibe.
Softstar’s in-house development team has long been praised for its refined storytelling, inventive concepts, and mastery of atmosphere—and “Junji Ito Maniac: An Infinite Gaol” is no exception. To bring the game’s eerie and intricate tone to life, professional actors were brought in for both motion capture and voice recording.

The actors shared that performing from a first-person perspective felt like stepping directly into the game’s twisted world. It demanded not only emotional depth but also physical precision to maintain the visual flow and pacing. To embody the game’s grotesque and otherworldly tone, actors had to break free from natural movement patterns and reinterpret their performances through an entirely new physical lens.
They described the complex choreography and emotionally intense scenes as physically and mentally exhausting—but it is precisely this dedication that ensures players experience the suffocating tension and immersive horror the game strives to deliver.
“Junji Ito Maniac: An Infinite Gaol” centres on an oppressively immersive horror experience where there is truly no escape. Blending hallucinations, the suffocating sense of endless cycles, and disturbing depictions of twisted human nature, the game leads players through a tangled narrative that forces them to confront their deepest fears.
Check out the teaser trailer below!
More Game Reviews
Ikai (2022) Game Review – A Treat for Fans of Japanese-Inspired Horror Games
The sixth-generation era of video games is often regarded as the pinnacle of survival horror, having granted us titles such as Silent Hill 2, Fatal Frame, Forbidden Siren, and the…
Japan Deep Dive: The Curse of Kowai Shashin (2002)
Hello, fellow weirdos! Today, we are delving into the Kowai Shashin, a purportedly cursed Japanese video game with a fascinating marketing strategy that incorporates urban legends and exploits the naivety…
Hololive Error Teaser Demo – Video Content
For those who have been living under a rock for the last few years, Vtubers are a popular format of streamers who use an animated avatar in the style of…
Saya no Uta (2003) Game Review – Lovecraftian Horror Visual Novel
As a gamer, it took me a long time to get around to playing any visual novels. With the assumption that all visual novels were redundant dating sims, I avoided…
Bramble: The Mountain King (2023) Video Game Review
Bramble: The Mountain King is a single-player adventure platformer video game, developed on the Unreal 4 engine by Swedish game developer Dimfrost Studio and published under Merge Studio. Dimfrost Studio…
Gregory Horror Show (2003) Game Review – Strange Survival-Horror
Gregory Horror Show is a 2003 Japanese mystery survival horror, developed by Capcom and released on PS2 in Japan and in Europe a few months later. The game is based…






