Every article tag can be clicked to get a list of all articles in that category. Every article tag also has an RSS feed! You can customize an RSS feed too!
We do often include affiliate links to earn us some pennies. See more here.

Slayaway Camp might not be a new game but it's something I only jumped into recently and it's a really great puzzle game. In it you control Skullface, a psychotic slasher bent on slaughtering people at camp.

Not the nicest of settings for a puzzle game, it's a little (okay a lot) violent with decapitating, squashing, axe-to-the-face and all sorts of bloody murder going on. You can tweak the amount of gore and such but it's honestly pretty amusing with the blocky graphical style. The developer says it's actually a "diabolical logic game that also happens to be a bloody tribute to eighties trash horror" and it fits that quite nicely.

Slayaway Camp is all about positioning, you pick a direction and your chosen psycho slides all the way until they hit someone or something. A tile-based movement idea that's been done time and time again but with the design work and how much content went into it—it's a true cut above the rest.

It's this super easy control scheme that makes it so utterly gripping, you load it up and just keep on tapping around until an hour passes and your coffee has gone cold. I've genuinely laughed-out-loud quite a number of times while playing, sometimes because the stupidness of it startled me. Like the first time someone ran away into a fire, gosh that was hilarious. Slayaway Camp makes a puzzle game not feel like a puzzle game, you pretty much forget half the time you're actually working your way through it and using your brain to plan your steps because it's just so fluid and fun.

When you get further into it, the challenge does increase. It's not always so easy, I'll be clear on that. There's times where you have a limited amount of turns too, tiles you can't land on or you you're captured and so on. Quite a bit of customization and progression there too, with you gaining special coins to unlock Gore Packs for more death scenes and different killers like my favourite the Gelatinous Cube.

Many of the characters you can get are, like parts of the game itself, a homage to classic movie-killers like Gremling, Jill Frost and Nailface.

Feature Highlight:

  • 10 gut-wrenching “videotapes,” plus deleted scenes, for over 200 puzzle levels
  • Traps! Cops! SWAT teams! Land mines! Rotary telephones! Cats!
  • Unlock the NC-17 mode on all movies for even more puzzle insanity (+ censored shower scenes)
  • Starring Mark Meer (Cdr. Shepard from Mass Effect) as “Skullface” and Derek Mears (Jason from Friday the 13th) as “Jessica”
  • Unlock multiple psycho killers, including ones based on cult horror movies such as “American Mary”
  • Discover dozens of spectacular “Gorepack” kill scenes featuring wood-chippers, lawnmowers, Sumerian demon incantations, and more!
  • Genuine hair-metal soundtrack by legendary Canadian group GNÜ TRUNTION

Dark, brutally hilarious and really does give your brain a workout without you even realising. An excellent game to keep jumping back into to solve some more puzzles. Quite likely the most brutal puzzle game around and it works great on Linux.

Want to get slashing and puzzle solving? Slayaway Camp is available on Humble Store and Steam.

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
8 Likes
About the author -
author picture
I am the owner of GamingOnLinux. After discovering Linux back in the days of Mandrake in 2003, I constantly checked on the progress of Linux until Ubuntu appeared on the scene and it helped me to really love it. You can reach me easily by emailing GamingOnLinux directly.
See more from me
The comments on this article are closed.
7 comments

Nanobang Mar 13, 2020
View PC info
  • Supporter
I own it, but haven't yet played it. I will say to anyone interested in this game, give Party Hard a look-see as well. A bit more fluid and bloody, it is nonetheless a puzzle game at heart, trying to kill as many partygoers as you can in an increasingly elaborate set of parties. It's available on Steam and Humble.


Last edited by Nanobang on 13 March 2020 at 12:13 pm UTC
fabertawe Mar 13, 2020
I've had this ages and it's great for revisiting for a quick puzzle or two between the more "time sink" games I own. The style is excellent and amusing and the puzzles can be quite tricky, then you kick yourself when you finally work one out!
buckysrevenge Mar 13, 2020
Quoting: NanobangI own it, but haven't yet played it. I will say to anyone interested in this game, give Party Hard a look-see as well. A bit more fluid and bloody, it is nonetheless a puzzle game at heart, trying to kill as many partygoers as you can in an increasingly elaborate set of parties. It's available on Steam and Humble.

I like both games, but Slayaway Camp is a very strict puzzle game in that many of the scenarios only have one solution, whereas Party Hard is more flexible in how you deal with the deaths. Slayaway Camp's humor is also a much more campy on the nose homage to the horror movie genre
dpanter Mar 13, 2020
Boo, Liam didn't mention my guide! :P
Slayaway Camp Killers list (spoiler warning!)
buckysrevenge Mar 13, 2020
Quoting: dpanterBoo, Liam didn't mention my guide! :P
Slayaway Camp Killers list (spoiler warning!)
That will be useful for me, I reinstalled my system and it didn't seem that cloud saving was working for me, I lost all my progress
dpanter Mar 14, 2020
Ouch, losing saves is not fun. Think of Steam Cloud as a multi-PC save syncing feature, it's not a backup solution. Backup those precious saves, people!

Slayaway Camp saves are stored in long codestrings in files charsInfo and prefs, found here:
~/.config/unity3d/Blue Wizard/slayaway camp/
Duck Hunt-Pr0 Mar 14, 2020
yes, yes i have
While you're here, please consider supporting GamingOnLinux on:

Reward Tiers: Patreon. Plain Donations: PayPal.

This ensures all of our main content remains totally free for everyone! Patreon supporters can also remove all adverts and sponsors! Supporting us helps bring good, fresh content. Without your continued support, we simply could not continue!

You can find even more ways to support us on this dedicated page any time. If you already are, thank you!
The comments on this article are closed.