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"path": "/directive-8020-review",
"publishedAt": "2026-05-11T14:00:00.000Z",
"site": "https://www.eurogamer.net",
"tags": [
"Supermassive Games",
"Third person",
"PS5",
"Bandai Namco Entertainment",
"Xbox Series X/S",
"Single Player",
"The Dark Pictures Anthology: Directive 8020",
"Multiplayer Competitive",
"PC",
"Action Adventure",
"Multiplayer Cooperative",
"Read more"
],
"textContent": "Stop me if you've heard this one (or something like it) before: the Earth is dying, and humanity's last hope is a lone inhabitable planet, light years from home. A crack crew of humanity's finest is assembled for an eight-year space mission to survey the planet, but when they finally awaken from their four-year cryoslumber, an unknown organism has infiltrated their ship, turning their voyage of hope into a paranoid nightmare. And does the mega-corporation funding this whole endeavour know more than it's letting on? Of course it does. Directive 8020 builds its story like a sci-fi horror best-of that only feels marginally less derivative the longer it goes, and while it also marks a welcome advancement for developer Supermassive's Dark Pictures Anthology formula in certain respects, it sadly never _quite_ comes into its own.\n\nRead more",
"title": "Directive 8020 review"
}