Guess this movie is from an alternate universe where John Carpenter’s “The Thing” was a box office beast, and E.T flopped (opposite of reality). This leads to the market being much more willing to fund sci-if horror, leading to the green lighting of John Carpenter’s extremely ambitious “Dead Space,” released in 1984. Praised as a new standard for the burgeoning sci-fi horror genre that began with Ridley Scott’s Alien, Dead Space had an initially slow box office performance, but was a smash hit on VCR and DVD. (Dead Space the game wasn’t profitable IRL until about a year after it released believe it or not. It was never a number 1 best seller.)
@@corporaldwaynehicks5222 Hmm. Here I go. In spite of the 1984 sci-fi horror film Dead Space’s critical success, it’s modest box office performance meant that there were initially no plans for a sequel. However, everything changed in 1986 with the release of Aliens, a film which perhaps not so coincidentally starred Dead Space’s lead actor Michael Biehn as Corporal Dwayne Hicks. This casting choice inevitably led to many comparisons being made between Aliens and Dead Space, and Alien’s box office success led to Redwood Shores (film studio in this universe) to finally green-light Dead Space 2. John Carpenter enthusiastically accepted when offered the chance to direct and co-write this sequel. Boasting an even bigger budget than it’s predecessor, Dead Space 2 was to be an action horror story in which CEC engineer Isaac Clarke would fight his way through the enormous Titan Station in order to stop a necromorph outbreak. Once again Michael Biehn was to reprise his role as the beleaguered Isaac Clarke, and new faces such as Keith Davids, a veteran of John Carpenter’s smash hit The Thing, Harold Raimis of Ghostbusters fame, and interestingly enough, Sigourney Weaver, the lead star of the franchise that Dead Space was increasingly touted as the rival to. After 2 years in production, Dead Space 2 was released on October 31, 1988. While Redwood and director John Carpenter expected a modest performance in the box office, Dead Space 2 defied expectations and became a box office success, almost immediately outpacing Dead Space 1 in sales. Critics hailed Dead Space 2 as a perfect combination of action and horror, however almost unanimously agreed that Dead Space 1 was the scarier of the two. Michael Biehn, who at that point had become a big name in the sci-fi horror field due to his work in dead space 1 and Aliens, became a house hold name to those who followed this genre and would continue to be casted in the leading role of many more sci-fi horror, as well as action horror films of the late 80s and the 1990s. (Resident Evil? Who knows, maybe he’d be a good Chris Redfield) To this day, Dead Space 2 remains one of the most expensive horror films ever made. So yeah, in this universe Michael Biehn is way more of a star than he is in our reality.
@@superstalin1693 This sounds like the perfect timeline, lol and man, Michael Biehn is so underrated. He would have made an excellent Chris Redfield if RE were movies. Complementing the lore of this alternate reality, I had thought that originally, DS was a David Cronenberg script, but it was too gruesome, dark and violent, so it stayed there. Carpenter resurrected the project and gave it the shape of 1984's Dead Space, making several substantial changes, like it took place on a mining ship instead of a space prison and the protagonist was an engineer instead of a prisoner. All the lore like CEC, the Ishimura, the Planet Cracking Industry, the Marker and the Unitology was Carpenter's work. Although it was more tolerable, it was still quite gory and violent, kind of like The Thing but on crack. Dead Space 2 was considered satanic in certain sectors, especially religious, among other reasons, for the hallucination scenes. In addition and for this very reason, the movie was accused of provoking epileptic seizures, and that there were literally satanic messages in between, but it didn't go beyond a silly creepypasta. Anyway, the psychosis scenes served as inspiration for what would later become Event Horizon. In the 2000s came out Callisto Protocol, which was inspired by Cronenberg's original script but wasn't on Dead Space's level, mostly because of the CGI abuse. It was directed by Stephen Sommers (The Mummy and Deep Rising). It didn't do badly, but not very well either.
@@corporaldwaynehicks5222unny about the satanism and occult perception. You read my mind on what event horizon would be in this timeline. I think Event Horizon would also be perceived here as a love letter from a mega fan, and a good send off to the era of sci-fi horror domination, and rise of zombie/psychological horror films (aforementioned resident evil and also silent hill). Also, I think the hallucinations would influence Silent Hill in this timeline as well. And yeah, I’d say the Callisto Protocol would maybe have a couple of people that were producers for Dead Space and would tout it as the next big thing. I think that Dead Space would still be a game, since The Thing was adapted into a video game in like 2005. So in this universe a tie in game would be made for Dead Space in 2008. However, it would be radically different from the game we know. Following the story of either P-sec detective Nate McNeil or security officer Gabe Weller as they frantically search for an escape from the Aegis system. The game would have the designs and everything of the movie, and the story would basically be the story of Dead Space Extraction. Also, the thought of Michael Biehn as Chris Redfield punching boulders in a resident evil sequel is now ingrained into my head. Lol. Given how much I love horror, this alternate reality would be awesome. EDIT: Man, now that I think about it, I really wanna get my hands on that theoretical dead space tie in game now. It’d be so weird to play.
So what you’re saying is AI has no imagination and artists worried about their jobs being stolen can shut up since they have the power of the human brain, which AI obviously and arguably hilariously lacks
@@anusmcgee4150 it's less about jobs being stolen (no one is blaming the AI directly) and more about concern about future industry practices. If this stuff really takes off and improves, you can bet media companies will use every angle of it they can to cut corners on utilizing and paying actual artists.
@@breathtakingsamurai981 So what you’re saying is they only operate on the parameters you tell it and they’re incapable of coming up with something completely different. That sounds an awful lot like my point.
Tech was advanced enough to make things look "hi-tech" but primitive enough to make everything look clunky and industrial. 80s sci-fi doesn't look like the future. It looks like "the future of the past".
@@brendanlogue5665 yeah, it got more of Event Horizon vibe where it done horribly in theatres but become it instant cult-classi when it reached home-media
I can see this movie in my head. The sets, the sounds, the necromorphs as guys in costumes, the leviathan as some sort of mixture between life-sized puppets and stop motion. It's almost real.
I already felt like dead space sorta resembles John Carpenter's The Thing. The original. Not the newer movie. All the different forms that the thing takes throughout the movie, and the different forms of necromorphs are kind of on par with each other. I'm more than certain that there was a direct inspiration.
I love how the Necromorphs have a similar aesthetic to the biomechanical Xenomorphs from Alien. Though the Necromorphs here have "tubes" as it's theme which I love.
There's something _so perfect_ about this cause in a lot of ways, Deadspace _already is_ an '80s movie. It's what you get when you combine a zombie flick, James Cameron's _Aliens_, and Event Horizon lol.
Even the neural network misses the 80th. It was the time of youth of those who are now creating neural networks and the golden age of fiction. The director of the film should have been either John Carpenter or Sir Ridley Scott.
All 3 of these videos you've done are breathtakingly accurate to that alien/the thing look. I really want to see these made and have convinced me id rather see these set along this decade than the future we see in so many sci fi movies today. You inspire me my friend, keep it up! :)
All of those deep and dark areas, rooms, and crevices of that ship with all of those necromorphs on board. Playing as Isaac equipped with only a few weapons, health, ammo, and armor he had. Brings back memories playing it. Both this and Dead Space 2. If you were to total the amount of necromorphs one blasted away, in this series, and stomped they would have amounted to hundreds or even thousands. Nostalgia!
Out of all of the "80's Sci-fi/Dark Fantasy" videos this and FNV were probably my favorite although I feel like this has a more retrofuristic/industrial style of 60's-70's sci-fi than the more fantastical sci-fi style of the 80's (although some films did use this style during the 80's it started to die out during this period)
There's so much potential for a great Dead Space movie adaption if done right. So many elements from the game would translate so well on screen. The ambient sounds and voices of the Isimura would be creepy as fuck in a theater, and the necromorphs could be one of the scariest creatures seen on screen since the xenomorph if they did it correctly. It's a shame John Carpenter isn't doing it, but as long as the people producing it do the material justice it'd be sick.
Most people do not realise that those 80s sci-fi horror and action movies still hold up due to the tight and near flawless editing. The transition from scene to scene, the pacing, the exposition integrated using musical cues without using extensive dialogues. I doubt if nowadays, we can get movies made like that.
Wow, everyone who recently dabbled in A.I. imagery too, knows - this is NOT just pushing buttons, but instead a serious skill of a HUMAN, who created this!
Still image from Dead Space as a thrilling space horror scifi movie from the 80s, wide shot of the Ishimura hydroponics deck, completely abandoned, dark, it seems that the entire crew disappeared from one moment to the next, depressing atmosphere, directed by John Carpenter, 1984
I'm not sure about the base Necromorphs, but everything else looks great, apart from the health bar backlights not being present. The space marines look really accurate to how they appear in the game.
Uggghh the fact that I can imagine the necromorphs appearing as either practical effects/ suits and/or stop motion creatures makes me wish this would’ve happened a lot more
Basically, think of this as being part of the thing universe, the thing is the storyline of dead space Martyr where they have discovered the marker in the antarctic
This may be a meme, but we really need an adaptation if the franchise. Imagine the song "True" playing at the end, showing different planets for the beginning credits, only to reveal the Nicole hallucination jumpscare and going back to the normal, scary credits. If you listen to the lyrics carefully, it goes great with the whole theme of being under the influence of a marker.
Guess this movie is from an alternate universe where John Carpenter’s “The Thing” was a box office beast, and E.T flopped (opposite of reality). This leads to the market being much more willing to fund sci-if horror, leading to the green lighting of John Carpenter’s extremely ambitious “Dead Space,” released in 1984. Praised as a new standard for the burgeoning sci-fi horror genre that began with Ridley Scott’s Alien, Dead Space had an initially slow box office performance, but was a smash hit on VCR and DVD. (Dead Space the game wasn’t profitable IRL until about a year after it released believe it or not. It was never a number 1 best seller.)
NGL. That sounds like an interesting reality. So I have to ask hypothetically what happened to Dead Space 2 here?
@@corporaldwaynehicks5222
Hmm. Here I go.
In spite of the 1984 sci-fi horror film Dead Space’s critical success, it’s modest box office performance meant that there were initially no plans for a sequel. However, everything changed in 1986 with the release of Aliens, a film which perhaps not so coincidentally starred Dead Space’s lead actor Michael Biehn as Corporal Dwayne Hicks. This casting choice inevitably led to many comparisons being made between Aliens and Dead Space, and Alien’s box office success led to Redwood Shores (film studio in this universe) to finally green-light Dead Space 2. John Carpenter enthusiastically accepted when offered the chance to direct and co-write this sequel. Boasting an even bigger budget than it’s predecessor, Dead Space 2 was to be an action horror story in which CEC engineer Isaac Clarke would fight his way through the enormous Titan Station in order to stop a necromorph outbreak. Once again Michael Biehn was to reprise his role as the beleaguered Isaac Clarke, and new faces such as Keith Davids, a veteran of John Carpenter’s smash hit The Thing, Harold Raimis of Ghostbusters fame, and interestingly enough, Sigourney Weaver, the lead star of the franchise that Dead Space was increasingly touted as the rival to.
After 2 years in production, Dead Space 2 was released on October 31, 1988. While Redwood and director John Carpenter expected a modest performance in the box office, Dead Space 2 defied expectations and became a box office success, almost immediately outpacing Dead Space 1 in sales. Critics hailed Dead Space 2 as a perfect combination of action and horror, however almost unanimously agreed that Dead Space 1 was the scarier of the two. Michael Biehn, who at that point had become a big name in the sci-fi horror field due to his work in dead space 1 and Aliens, became a house hold name to those who followed this genre and would continue to be casted in the leading role of many more sci-fi horror, as well as action horror films of the late 80s and the 1990s. (Resident Evil? Who knows, maybe he’d be a good Chris Redfield)
To this day, Dead Space 2 remains one of the most expensive horror films ever made.
So yeah, in this universe Michael Biehn is way more of a star than he is in our reality.
@@superstalin1693 This sounds like the perfect timeline, lol and man, Michael Biehn is so underrated. He would have made an excellent Chris Redfield if RE were movies.
Complementing the lore of this alternate reality, I had thought that originally, DS was a David Cronenberg script, but it was too gruesome, dark and violent, so it stayed there. Carpenter resurrected the project and gave it the shape of 1984's Dead Space, making several substantial changes, like it took place on a mining ship instead of a space prison and the protagonist was an engineer instead of a prisoner. All the lore like CEC, the Ishimura, the Planet Cracking Industry, the Marker and the Unitology was Carpenter's work.
Although it was more tolerable, it was still quite gory and violent, kind of like The Thing but on crack. Dead Space 2 was considered satanic in certain sectors, especially religious, among other reasons, for the hallucination scenes. In addition and for this very reason, the movie was accused of provoking epileptic seizures, and that there were literally satanic messages in between, but it didn't go beyond a silly creepypasta. Anyway, the psychosis scenes served as inspiration for what would later become Event Horizon.
In the 2000s came out Callisto Protocol, which was inspired by Cronenberg's original script but wasn't on Dead Space's level, mostly because of the CGI abuse. It was directed by Stephen Sommers (The Mummy and Deep Rising). It didn't do badly, but not very well either.
@@corporaldwaynehicks5222unny about the satanism and occult perception. You read my mind on what event horizon would be in this timeline. I think Event Horizon would also be perceived here as a love letter from a mega fan, and a good send off to the era of sci-fi horror domination, and rise of zombie/psychological horror films (aforementioned resident evil and also silent hill). Also, I think the hallucinations would influence Silent Hill in this timeline as well. And yeah, I’d say the Callisto Protocol would maybe have a couple of people that were producers for Dead Space and would tout it as the next big thing. I think that Dead Space would still be a game, since The Thing was adapted into a video game in like 2005. So in this universe a tie in game would be made for Dead Space in 2008. However, it would be radically different from the game we know. Following the story of either P-sec detective Nate McNeil or security officer Gabe Weller as they frantically search for an escape from the Aegis system. The game would have the designs and everything of the movie, and the story would basically be the story of Dead Space Extraction.
Also, the thought of Michael Biehn as Chris Redfield punching boulders in a resident evil sequel is now ingrained into my head. Lol.
Given how much I love horror, this alternate reality would be awesome.
EDIT: Man, now that I think about it, I really wanna get my hands on that theoretical dead space tie in game now. It’d be so weird to play.
@@superstalin1693give us one about dead space 3 please. I gotta know how it ends
Love how the necromorphs are a combination of pumpkinhead and Xenomorphs lol
So what you’re saying is AI has no imagination and artists worried about their jobs being stolen can shut up since they have the power of the human brain, which AI obviously and arguably hilariously lacks
@@anusmcgee4150
Looks like AI doing it the same way humans do. They take existing things and combine them into something different.
@@anusmcgee4150 it's less about jobs being stolen (no one is blaming the AI directly) and more about concern about future industry practices. If this stuff really takes off and improves, you can bet media companies will use every angle of it they can to cut corners on utilizing and paying actual artists.
@@breathtakingsamurai981 So what you’re saying is they only operate on the parameters you tell it and they’re incapable of coming up with something completely different. That sounds an awful lot like my point.
@@getschwifty5537 that’s a fair point.
Fun Fact: director John Carpenter who creating The Thing (1982) was thinking about adapting Dead Space into a live action film..
Is that true
Holy crap that would be sweet
Bueno, seria lo mismo que la película The Thing pero con más acción, suspense y futurista
DO IT!! DO IT NOW! IM RIGHT HERE COME ON take money & slap ot on my face
There’s still a possibility I think he still wants to make a dead space movie but I forgot what article I read it from
Haven't really jumped on this "As an 80's bla bla movie" bandwagon, but THIS, this looks absolutely insane. I want this movie.
Unlike most bandwagons, this one’s actually cool.
@@jamesedleymusic true!
Yea yea we get it you’re special
So much this!
Try Event Horizon It's the closest you can get and still.. amazing
That marker is absolutely spot on to what an 80's version would look like. Jesus AI art is taking a whole new level
I totally agree.
Everything in this looks amazing, but the Marker was what really caught my attention!
Don't know why, but 80 style sci-fi was unique
Tech was advanced enough to make things look "hi-tech" but primitive enough to make everything look clunky and industrial. 80s sci-fi doesn't look like the future. It looks like "the future of the past".
Animatronics 😁
We didn't know what cable management was back then
This movie was so good, I hope they'll make a game based on this
Can I know the name of this movie please
@@5655-s8o dead space
@@5655-s8o AI Generated Art; The Slideshow
The amount of Oscars and praise this movie would've gotten for at the time if it were real
This film would have left aliens in the dust
Knowing how irl plays out it would have bombed in theaters and then become a cult hit once it released to VHS later
@@brendanlogue5665 yeah, it got more of Event Horizon vibe where it done horribly in theatres but become it instant cult-classi when it reached home-media
Yeah, like carpenter's the thing.
Most scifi is treated like crap in the Oscars. At most it would have won for special effects and sound
If this movie happened in a perfect world, I would fund a machine to help me travel to the alternate universe.
John Carpenter is interested in making a dead space movie so instead of a time machine, maybe you can try to convince EA to let him do it
There's already one. The Hydron collider.
If the multiverse truly existed, then there is a universe out there where this happened.
I can see this movie in my head. The sets, the sounds, the necromorphs as guys in costumes, the leviathan as some sort of mixture between life-sized puppets and stop motion. It's almost real.
Stan Winston
I love the casting idea for Isaac. The more I think about it, the more suitable the choice becomes.
The 80's style captures the gritty, functionality only, industrial look of the Ishimura so well, if by different means. It's gorgeous.
Surprisingly fitting with Giger biomechanical aesthetic, also a good mix of event horizon and alien, really nailed down Dead Space inspirations
A groundbreaking movie 40 years later
Aw dude, The Hunter being a cyborg Necromorph is so sick.
Dead Space directed by Ridley Scott (1981)
This just goes to show how we are missing so many amazing ideas for media, truly incredible
It’ll be incredible when ai has the ability to create feature length films like this in probably 2-3 years time
these casting choices were really good across the board
The song name is "Infiltrator", by Karl Casey
This would've been an awesome movie
FANTASTIC!!! 80's sci-fi would aspire to the production design of this. The detail of the sets and costumes is top notch.
I already felt like dead space sorta resembles John Carpenter's The Thing. The original. Not the newer movie. All the different forms that the thing takes throughout the movie, and the different forms of necromorphs are kind of on par with each other. I'm more than certain that there was a direct inspiration.
What newer movie
@@spade8094 there was one in 2011 if I remember correctly.
@@Tactical_wulf5.56 that *thing* doesn't exist, nothing happened in paradise, AZ
Dude the marines look so badass. They look like they could fit in to Aliens as the weyland commandos we see in the various games
I love how the Necromorphs have a similar aesthetic to the biomechanical Xenomorphs from Alien. Though the Necromorphs here have "tubes" as it's theme which I love.
That would be sick! Dead space deserves its own movie!
There's something _so perfect_ about this cause in a lot of ways, Deadspace _already is_ an '80s movie. It's what you get when you combine a zombie flick, James Cameron's _Aliens_, and Event Horizon lol.
I’d give my left kidney to actually see this movie get made
the USG Ishimura looks dope
Don't know how this game don't have a live action yet wtf is so good concept
The beat is just hits like a beast. This would have been a Movie I would have loved if it existed. Kinda like Predator 2 a under rated piece of art.
These computer generated renderings are mind blowing! Watching 1980's B movies in 3:4 VHS back in the day, you would use your imagination WOW!!!😳
Now make Doom as a 80's Dark horror!!
Now that's an interesting choice!
Even the neural network misses the 80th. It was the time of youth of those who are now creating neural networks and the golden age of fiction. The director of the film should have been either John Carpenter or Sir Ridley Scott.
Eventually AI will be able to make movies like this :O
Dang !!! You did an amazing job!!!
All 3 of these videos you've done are breathtakingly accurate to that alien/the thing look. I really want to see these made and have convinced me id rather see these set along this decade than the future we see in so many sci fi movies today. You inspire me my friend, keep it up! :)
I hope Hollywood is taking notes because this stuff is nailing it in the action/horror movie department. Make practical effects again!
0:52
Holy shit that's actually terrifying
The 80´s truly were the prime of Movies.
All of those deep and dark areas, rooms, and crevices of that ship with all of those necromorphs on board. Playing as Isaac equipped with only a few weapons, health, ammo, and armor he had. Brings back memories playing it. Both this and Dead Space 2. If you were to total the amount of necromorphs one blasted away, in this series, and stomped they would have amounted to hundreds or even thousands. Nostalgia!
If R.Scott and H.R Giger got a hold of Dead Space.
H.R. art is god like it makes dead space necromorphs look like vomit.
Out of all of the "80's Sci-fi/Dark Fantasy" videos this and FNV were probably my favorite although I feel like this has a more retrofuristic/industrial style of 60's-70's sci-fi than the more fantastical sci-fi style of the 80's (although some films did use this style during the 80's it started to die out during this period)
This was pretty much a trippy walk through. 10/10
This is one of the best of these conversions, easy. The marine suits look incredible, and the marker is an album cover just by itself.
Bro that redesign of the Ishimura… it’s beautiful
USM Valor Marines suit is top notch
Damn, and you picked the perfect music too to go along side with this.
Awesome video!!How about an Ridley Scott-ish 90s movie next lol
There's so much potential for a great Dead Space movie adaption if done right. So many elements from the game would translate so well on screen. The ambient sounds and voices of the Isimura would be creepy as fuck in a theater, and the necromorphs could be one of the scariest creatures seen on screen since the xenomorph if they did it correctly. It's a shame John Carpenter isn't doing it, but as long as the people producing it do the material justice it'd be sick.
I hope I live to see someone make a good "Dead Space" movie.
Most people do not realise that those 80s sci-fi horror and action movies still hold up due to the tight and near flawless editing. The transition from scene to scene, the pacing, the exposition integrated using musical cues without using extensive dialogues. I doubt if nowadays, we can get movies made like that.
Wow, everyone who recently dabbled in A.I. imagery too, knows - this is NOT just pushing buttons, but instead a serious skill of a HUMAN, who created this!
Now THIS…. THIS gave me what I needed. 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
3:48 I need a hero...
Loool
Good timing considering John Carpenter recently stated how much he would love to do a Dead Space film
The marker looking too freaking dope, definitely borrowing the design for my next DnD campaign.
love how engine control room is almost carbon copy of the Chornobyl reactor control room
this is amazing! great work 👍
AI wrongly assumes that necromorphs need to feed thus teeth.
Love the Maries aesthetic!
I remember this movie. An absolute classic.
Best one yet. The dirty gruesome hard sci-fi vibe is here
Here's the link to the song: ua-cam.com/video/RL9AvEHiJ3k/v-deo.html
This artwork is so amazing
Did nobody mention the music so far?! Perfect fit!
One day. This technology could produce a full movie 🍿🎥
The poster at the beginning actually looks really cool
Lately, I've been very annoyed by the random 80's movie meme coming out, but this came out very well. It's cool!
Schwarzenegger as Isaac Clarke,
"Necromorphs, I'll be back babeeee"
Dead Space 2 as an 80s movie has just been released. Link below.
ua-cam.com/video/RnsNr7CjwQ0/v-deo.html
imagine if all this shit gets animated by the ia one day
Cant get enough of these.
That render of the Ishimura is honestly better than the original.
Anyone know prompts to get big structures like at 2:00?
Still image from Dead Space as a thrilling space horror scifi movie from the 80s, wide shot of the Ishimura hydroponics deck, completely abandoned, dark, it seems that the entire crew disappeared from one moment to the next, depressing atmosphere, directed by John Carpenter, 1984
@@corporaldwaynehicks5222 Ty
3:08 second hunter looks 🔥🔥🔥🔥 0:52 Necromorphs as well
As if I wasn’t already hyped for the game.
I'm not sure about the base Necromorphs, but everything else looks great, apart from the health bar backlights not being present. The space marines look really accurate to how they appear in the game.
I absolutely love the music. So badass
2:28 Those marines look badass!
That a masterpiece USM VALOR Soldier 🥺
Uggghh the fact that I can imagine the necromorphs appearing as either practical effects/ suits and/or stop motion creatures makes me wish this would’ve happened a lot more
Basically, think of this as being part of the thing universe, the thing is the storyline of dead space Martyr where they have discovered the marker in the antarctic
Oh I knew Dead Space would fit right into this particular theme. And I wasn't wrong.
Amazing soundtrack. Just like the 80's, that i miss so much.
I need this music playlist
Greate video! part 2 and dead space 2 and 3? extraction? dead space mobile? severed? etc?
In a few minutes. Stay tuned!
Hey :D
The difference between the USG Ishimura and the USCSS Nostromo is it’s function and the system it went missing in
There was dead space movie that came out in the early nineties. I don't remember who was in it, but I remember seeing it.
Это просто ахуительно! Глаз не оторвать)
А ведь лучше и не скажешь!
My gosh beside the necormorphs, this looks badass. Wish this was made.
Dead space is The Thing in the space
This may be a meme, but we really need an adaptation if the franchise. Imagine the song "True" playing at the end, showing different planets for the beginning credits, only to reveal the Nicole hallucination jumpscare and going back to the normal, scary credits.
If you listen to the lyrics carefully, it goes great with the whole theme of being under the influence of a marker.
Why isn’t this music in the game
I'd love this as an idea, although it would have to be pretty gorey for an 80s movie to fit dead space. Like the thing but on crack.
Imagine a game with that esthetic
perhaps in the near future we will be able to ask an AI to create one for us 😜
The monster design is straight up if nightmares had nightmares.
Deffinetly nails the 80s Sci fi horror feel, which is the point I guess. It just has such a different look and feel it could almost be it's own thing.
Thank you
You can't just change an entire style of a planet cracking ship and tell me it will do the same job! Lol
It already happened guys it’s called Event Horizon and it looks really similar