The Night Gym: The Ultimate Horror Workout Nightmare You Can’t Escape
Hello everyone. Let’s talk about The Night Gym, a “retro-style indie horror” experience set in… wait for it… a gym. Because yes, apparently the horrors of lifting heavy things and watching bros flex in a mirror wasn’t enough – we now need a VHS filter slapped on top of it.
Here’s the setup: It’s late at night. You’re alone in the gym. The lights flicker like they’ve been wired by a raccoon with a diploma in poor decision-making. There’s silence – the kind that’s supposed to be heavy and ominous, but will likely just make you more aware of the fridge hum in your real-world kitchen. And then, the big reveal: you’re not alone. Ooooooo. Somewhere between the elliptical machine and the dumbbell rack lurks… something. Probably debt collectors, let’s be honest.


Features That Sound More Exciting Than They Probably Are
- VHS effect – Because nothing says “I’m terrified” quite like pretending my expensive gaming monitor is a worn-out thrift store VCR.
- Atmospheric sounds – Translation: Footsteps, a door creak, and maybe an overly loud vent noise every few minutes.
- High-quality diverse locations – Diverse, in this case, being “room with treadmills” and “room with weights”.
- Interaction with barbells and dumbbells – Finally, a horror game allowing me to curl in perfect 8-bit form while fleeing eldritch cardio demons.
System Requirements That Make Me Suspicious
For a game that could probably run on my old Nokia, The Night Gym demands system specs that would make Crysis raise an eyebrow. 8GB RAM for lifting digital weights while being spooked? Really? And a GTX 1060 minimum? Either there’s some mind-bending tech witchcraft in those VHS lines or the developers assume we’ll all be streaming it in 8K for the 3 people watching on Twitch.
This VR and controller-less wonder is apparently best experienced with headphones for “immersion” – as though audio alone will distract you from the fact you’re still in a glorified polygonal Planet Fitness nightmare.
The Horror Behind the Horror
Let’s be brutally honest: this reeks of “small indie passion project” – which sounds lovely until you realize passion projects often mistake ambiance for gameplay. There’s no mention of enemies, puzzles, or actual objectives beyond surviving the oppressive tension of free weights and bad lighting. If that’s your jam, fine. For me, a game without a mechanical hook is like a treadmill: you’re moving, but you’re not going anywhere.
From a gamer’s standpoint, this has all the hallmarks of a “streamer bait” title. Atmospheric horror, short runtime, easy to digest in one sitting – probably designed for YouTubers to scream over while chat accuses them of faking it. From a conspiracy theory angle? Clearly the fitness industry is teaming up with retro horror devs to subliminally guilt-trip us into buying gym memberships. Wake up, sheeple.

Diagnosis: Mild Horror With Inflated Specs
As your resident gamer-MD, I prescribe a dose of skepticism taken twice daily until evidence of actual gameplay emerges. Prolonged exposure to VHS filters at this magnitude may result in retro fatigue and mild polygon-induced headaches. Proceed with caution.
Final Verdict
It could be fun in the same way microwaving cold coffee is satisfying – it gets the job done, but it’s hardly inspired. Without more depth, the biggest jump scare here will be your GPU usage meter. Overall? Interesting premise, but I’ve seen tech demos with more substance.
And that, ladies and gentlemen, is entirely my opinion.
Article Source: The Night Gym, https://store.steampowered.com/app/3921530/The_Night_Gym/