Two utterly unique and long lost ’90s PC horror classics have been exhumed, and they’re coming to Steam soon

Two utterly unique and long lost ’90s PC horror classics have been exhumed, and they’re coming to Steam soon


If you so much as flicked through a PC gaming magazine in the mid ’90s, you’ll probably recognise the name Ecstatica. Created by Londoner Andrew Spencer and published by Psygnosis, the series spawned two instalments: the first released in 1994 and is a medieval-themed survival horror. The second arrived in 1997, and while it’s very distinctly an Ecstatica game by dint of its art style, it dialed back the horror elements quite a bit.

That art style is pretty crucial: instead of polygonal character models, Ecstatica’s engine used ellipsoids, which are, well, roundish. Bulbous even. Rather than paraphrase the formula-ridden Wikipedia page for ellipsoids, it’s probably easier just to show you this:

(Image credit: SNEG)

It’s a pretty distinctive art style, and famously, Andrew Spencer wrote the engine himself from scratch. The ellipsoids are real as well: other games that have a similar art style, like Little Big Adventure for instance, implement Gouraud shading to create the effect of softness where there’s actually a hard angle.

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