Kriophobia: A Blood Chilling Exploration Into An Ice-solated Entrapment
Fira Soft and indie.io have chiseled out a different type of phobia that has been dormant in the ice. Kriophobia, a frozen hellscapse of a game, plays on the fear of the cold. What better place to symbolize such a horror than an isolated military base that experiences Winter year-round?
Kriophobia: The Cold Breath of Fear

Kriophobia follows the ordeal of Anna, a geophysicist on a scientific mission to Zhokhov Island in the East Siberian Sea. Her scientific expedition to the remote island goes sideways, and Anna’s crew gets trapped in an abandoned Soviet military base buried under the permafrost. Fantastic. As if being stranded in Siberia wasn’t a party already, now they’re stuck in a creepy relic from the Cold War. A relic that houses something just as deathly as the cold, and keen to wrap itself around Anna
The frosty air and wind gusts are your persistent enemies as the devs included a mechanic that measures Anna’s body temperature. You need to keep a meticulous eye on that gauge while scrounging up and hoarding ammo and health packs. If Anna lingers too long in one place, she’ll become another frozen specimen for the permafrost. Just like in real life, you need to keep Anna’s body moving and blood pumping to stay warm.
In this foreign Soviet base, a survival plan is a top priority instead of running around checking for the next clue. Layout the routes, find as many heat sources as possible, and think really hardd on whether or not to risk getting an item at the price of frostbite. Tempatation of resources and potentially useful tools are sadistic ploys that could save your life or lead you to a cold death. Make sure to keep this in mind: Anna’s crew may be gone, but it doesn’t mean that she is alone there.
Resident Evil and Silent Hill’s Permafrost Love Child

The developers at Fira Soft practically tattooed their inspirations on their foreheads, name-dropping classics like Resident Evil and Silent Hill as the inspirations for Kriophobia. It digs up the old-school fixed camera angles that purists adore for their cinematic flair and the rest of us curse for hiding whatever tentacled horror is lurking just out of frame.
Kriophobia has strange environmental puzzles, limited resources, and encounters that trigger the fight-or-flight conundrum. It’s a slow-burning psychological horror that prioritizes building a thick, suffocating atmosphere of dread. The story unspools at a glacial pace as Anna ventures deeper, uncovering a disturbing truth: this frozen hellhole feels weirdly familiar, almost like it’s been waiting for her.
A Gorgeously Preserved Nightmare

For all its old-school mechanics, one area where Kriophobia absolutely shines is its art style. With a cross-hatch of comic-book inked lines and textured visuals, the atmosphere gives an artistic yet subtle unnatural appearance. It’s like a graphic novel that paces around for your demise alone. Accompanying the artistic graphics is a Slavic-inspired soundtrack, a sound that amplifies the dire situation and haunting dread of isolation. It’s an audiovisual experience designed to make you feel utterly terrified.
Final Thoughts: Brace Yourselves! Kriophobia is Coming!
Kriophobia’s unique temperature management system and striking artistic identity carve out its own icy niche in the crowded survival horror world. It’s a tense, atmospheric, and genuinely unnerving descent into a Soviet-era mystery. Fira Soft has created a tundric survival horror game that seeps beneath your skin and drains you of any security and warmth. Tread carefully down those cold hallways, but for the love of those who love y’all, put on a jacket!
