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10 Best Mascot Horror Games on PC 2025
As much fondness for childhood cartoons and comic books as the mascots in mascot horror games can evoke from you, they are just as much terrifying as any other horror game. Sure, they prey on your emotions with childlike joy, using amusing environments with color and happy tunes, but soon, the tables turn, and you’re suddenly getting chased by an erratic beast.
Mascot horror was previously a specific niche of games prominent with Five Nights at Freddy’s entries. But now, more developers are curating their own unique ideas around the revolving exploration, puzzles, and survival horror gameplay elements. Find below the best mascot horror games on PC today.
10. Duck Season
While you can play Duck Season on screen, it’s best experienced in PCVR. You’ll be taken back in time to the summer of 1988, where you’re given a one-day rental of the Duck Season cartridge game. But this is unlike any other game, with a dark story you must unravel.
The best part, though, is the nostalgia that’ll hit you from the game’s retro vibes. It’s reminiscent of 1980s gaming, with its visuals and storytelling. Like the mascot horror genre itself, this is a walk back in memory lane, infusing horror with eerily familiar memories.
9. Ultimate Custom Night
At this point, if you haven’t played any of the Five Nights at Freddy’s games, it can be overwhelming choosing where to start. Well, how about combining seven of its best titles into one, providing you with 50 animatronics and zero to 20 difficulty settings.
No pressure fending off all of the killer animatronics in the game, with the freedom to take it at your own pace. It’s the same gameplay, manning the doors, vents, and air hoses. But also, new tools are added, including heaters, A/C, music boxes, power generators, lasers, and more, to use as distractions, traps, and so on.
8. Amanda The Adventurer
Missing the VCR days? You can indulge in nostalgia in Amanda the Adventurer, featuring literal VHS tapes you watch to unravel the story. But things get weird fast when the story transcends media into your character’s life, influencing her actions. You should hit pause at this very moment and pluck the tapes out of the VCR, but the mystery is too compelling to stop watching.
7. Tattletail
Some toys just don’t hit the same way, like the talking toy from Christmas 1988. Stupidly annoying, and has returned to haunt your dreams yet again. Tattletail is a deeply nostalgic mascot horror game, with the Tattletail talking toy giving you mischievous commands you must follow. If you don’t, he’ll simply never shut up.
6. My Friendly Neighborhood
The production studio of My Friendly Neighborhood puppet show suddenly gets back up and running after years of being closed down. You’re set to investigate, well, repair whatever is wrong, more rightly. Only to soon learn that a deeper, darker mystery might lie inside the halls of what used to be every kids’ favorite puppet show.
5. Indigo Park
Another of the best mascot horror games on PC worth checking out is Indigo Park. It takes you to an amusement park, long since abandoned. With Rambley the Raccoon by your side, you enter the park, eager to find out its secrets and reasons for shutting down.
The gameplay is simple enough, often an explorative spree. Rambley is present to guide your way, as you discover exciting collectibles, engage with park’s residents, and discover Indigo Parks’ darkest secrets.
4. Baldi’s Basics Classic Remastered
The only way I’m getting dragged back to school is via Baldi’s Basics Classic Remastered. You have to sneak around to avoid getting caught by malicious Baldi and his friends. And your goal is to collect all seven notebooks to beat the game. Easy enough, huh?
The Classic Remastered version comes bundled with three games, alongside improved gameplay, art style, and accessibility options. Either way, you’ll still enjoy the original playthrough of Baldi’s Basics, a combination of all the items in all games, shuffled around, in Birthday Bash, or try out the new Demo Style, which is a mix and match of new elements found in Baldi’s Basics Plus.
3. Bendy and the Ink Machine
Kind of the yellowish of backroom games, Bendy and the Ink Machine takes you to the abandoned animation workshop of Joey Drew Studios. No longer a place for warmth and joy, you unravel a dark history sure to destabilize your memory of old childhood cartoons.
The studio uses a deeply atmospheric style that chills the spine, with eerie shadows and a labyrinth of horrors. Not all of the characters you meet will be enemies. Some might just help you out, solving the mystery of the studio and its puzzling obstacles.
2. Poppy Playtime
Poppy Playtime might be more your style, taking you to an abandoned toy factory. You’re constantly on the lookout for vengeful toys roaming around the place, watching your every step deeper into the mysterious facility.
But rather than merely watch out for monsters and running like hell when you see them, you also explore the world for useful tools. Your artificial hands have steel wire attached to them that can grab onto heavy objects with ease. It can conduct electricity, too, which is useful when solving puzzles and finding your way around.
1. Five Nights at Freddy’s
Five Nights at Freddy’s ranks in first place among the best mascot horror games on PC, no question there. But which of its 28 games, including spin-offs, are the best to play? Well, how about starting from the first game? It’s worthy of praise, setting the standard for atmospheric and scary horror scenes that the franchise is known for.
FNaF: Sister Location went on to add innovative mechanics and improve the atmosphere. Meanwhile, FNaF: Help Wanted is a minigame collection of a variety of animatronics and jump scares. And FNaF: Security Breach is rather decent, although bogged down by technical issues and tedious navigation.