The 7th Guest (1993) lured you into Henry Stauf's creaky mansion with shiny CD-ROM swagger and smirking FMV ghosts. You wandered room to room, solving fiendish tabletop puzzles while the house drip-fed creepy lore like a sarcastic butler. Some riddles were brilliant, others pure head-scratching moon logic, and the interface occasionally fought back. Cheesy performances and sudden hauntings sold the mood, and it became a genuine CD-ROM showpiece. Still, the eerie pre-rendered rooms and George Sanger's soundtrack made every click feel haunted, even when you were just moving chess pieces.
Atmosphere for days, memorable FMV weirdness, inventive puzzles, strong soundtrack, and a mansion you never quite forget.
Several puzzles felt obtuse, interface was clunky, pacing dragged, and repeated retries could drain the scares.
A creaky-but-charming CD-ROM legend: spooky, puzzle-heavy, and uneven, yet still weirdly magnetic decades later.