The player must use cameras, lights, and doors to track the movements of the animatronics and prevent them from reaching the player's office. However, at night, the animatronics become active and start to roam around the restaurant, with the player taking on the role of a security guard trying to survive until dawn. The game is set in a pizza restaurant where animatronic animals, including Freddy Fazbear, Bonnie, and Chica, entertain children during the day. That's not to say Carrion isn't fun to play, but the game leans more into its shock value and misses out on some more unique gameplay opportunities.Five Nights at Freddy's is a survival horror video game that was first released in 2014. Even the rooms in the base start to get repetitive after a while. Although your creature gets bigger and meaner as the game progresses, the moments of feeling truly powerful are few and far between. This usually means players have to sneak up on their prey by taking out lights, keeping to the shadows, crawling through vents, and other textbook stealth mechanics. Fire is an even bigger threat, as your mass is apparently combustible and will continue to burn unless you find some convenient pool of water to douse the flames.
Although you're a shapeless mass of goo, bullets can rip you to shreds relatively quickly. One immediate surprise is just how fragile your blob monster can be.
In fact, if you look past the role-reversal gimmick, Carrion plays almost like any other side-scrolling action adventure game … just with a lot more blood and pixelated chunks of gore. But once the initial thrill wears off, it quickly becomes apparent that a lot of hard work goes into being a gelatinous harbinger of death. There's no denying that it's a lot of fun to give in to some darker impulses and leaving a path of slaughter and carnage in your wake. At least that's the premise behind Carrion, the self-described "reverse horror" game that flips the script by dropping players into the role of the bloodthirsty monster lurking in the shadows, instead of the victims running from it.