Pixel8Games
1993 • “Spooky, theatrical” vibe

The 7th Guest

Trilobyte • Interactive puzzle adventure • --:--

Puzzles, phantoms, bad decisions

Pixel8Games Score: 89% User Score: Difficulty: Devious Duration: --:--
👍 0 👎 0 Platforms:
Full review

Summary

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.

What it does well

Atmosphere for days, memorable FMV weirdness, inventive puzzles, strong soundtrack, and a mansion you never quite forget.

Where it falls short

Several puzzles felt obtuse, interface was clunky, pacing dragged, and repeated retries could drain the scares.

Verdict

A creaky-but-charming CD-ROM legend: spooky, puzzle-heavy, and uneven, yet still weirdly magnetic decades later.