Girl Abducted
- Midplayz
- Apr 11
- 3 min read
Updated: Apr 12
I’ve Always Wanted Aliens To Abduct Me
Imagine you're settling in for a quiet night, maybe just a cozy little horror flick vibe — and BAM — now you're being chased by mutants in a bunker with your sister and trying to not die. That's the chaotic energy Girl Abducted brings to the table, and honestly? It’s kind of a mess, but it’s my kind of mess. It’s this indie survival horror puzzle mash-up with weird aliens, Resident Evil vibes, and a surprisingly sweet sister dynamic.
About This Game
Storyline
The heart of this game is definitely the bond between Riley and Tina. It’s touching, occasionally hilarious, and keeps the whole experience feeling grounded even when you’re dodging mutants and shooting tentacle creatures in the face. The story is what really kept me going. It’s got that horror movie pacing with lots of “what the hell is going on” moments, and the ending? Super satisfying. Like, you go through all this crazy stuff and the game actually delivers an ending that makes it feel worth it. Plus, shoutout to a character named Charlie who lowkey saved the entire narrative.
Gameplay Mechanics
Now listen… gameplay-wise, this game is kinda trash at times. Like, running from an enemy just to get magically sucked back into their attack animation? Rage. There were moments I was yelling at my screen because the camera angles were actively trying to get me killed. Some enemies would even fake their death and sucker punch me as I walked by like, sir? Respectfully, stay dead.
That said, the puzzles were actually fun — tense and clever without being rage-quit levels of hard. There’s also shooting, but it’s not why you play the game. The combat is there. It exists. It works enough to let you get through the story. And yes, there are boss fights. The final one? Freakin’ epic in design, and thankfully, the game doesn’t make you restart from a mile back when you die. No healing items though, so it’s a sweaty-palms kind of situation.
Visuals & Audio
Visually, it’s... fine. Nothing revolutionary, and there aren’t even any graphics settings to mess with, but hey — it runs without crashing, and the creepy vibes are on point. Mutants look gross in a good way, environments are dark and claustrophobic, and it’s got that good “why is everything wet?” horror feel. The voice acting isn’t bad either, and some of the dialogue made me laugh way more than I expected. Definitely play with headphones — it makes the atmosphere 10x better.
Pros
Strong atmospheric horror
Hilarious dialogue moments
Puzzles are solid and satisfying
Genuinely fun and emotional story
Riley and Tina’s relationship is super well done
Boss fights, especially the final one, are memorable
Cons
Camera angles = death traps
Enemies glitching into “zombie surprise attacks”
No graphics settings (for the tweakers among us)
Combat is rough and sometimes straight-up broken
Conclusion
Girl Abducted is like that weird little horror film you find at 2 AM and end up loving, even though half of it makes no sense and the effects are kinda janky. The gameplay fumbles hard sometimes — glitchy combat, annoying enemy behaviors, and camera angles that seem to hate you personally. But the story? It’s genuinely great. The characters are lovable, the humor lands, and the ending ties it all up in a really satisfying way.
So yeah, if you’re in it for a tight indie horror with heart, puzzles, and a good story, it’s worth a playthrough. Just maybe keep your expectations in check when it comes to, y’know, actually playing it.
Rating: 8/10
I only wish I had siblings like Riley and Tina