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Routine review – a sci-fi horror video game 13 years in the making

Nick Gillett
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Nick Gillett
Published December 3, 2025 1:00am
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Routine screenshot of an attacking robot
Routine – robot isolation (Raw Fury)

Alien Isolation has a rival for spookiest retro sci-fi survival horror in this impressively atmospheric thriller from a new indie studio.

Sci-fi horror game Routine was originally announced at Gamescom way back in 2012. Since then, it’s popped back up a couple of times, only to head back into the thick fog of development hell, its tiny team attempting, and failing, to get it into a state where they could aim for a final release. The breakthrough came after signing a deal with Raw Fury, a publisher renowned for their supportive and collaborative attitude towards the developers they work with.

With more focus and a little more budget to work with, and after an almost unbelievable 13-year gestation period, Routine is finally here and while it’s clearly a first person survival horror, its look, feel, and puzzles are unlike anything else in its genre. That starts with the setting, which is a deserted moonbase in the near future. However, unlike most sci-fi milieux, this one’s free of any hint of glamour.

At the beginning of the game, you wake up from a distressing nightmare to find yourself locked in a windowless room, the quiet hum of machinery accompanying your confusion. There’s an old monochrome monitor built into the wall, where you can access a couple of email messages, along with an austere looking bed and lavatory. It’s more like a cell than a bedroom, a sense heightened by the fact that you can’t get out.

The walls, ceiling, and floor are made of metal that’s seen better days. Scuffs, dents and missing flecks of paint make it look old and well used, and there’s a pile of bin bags in the corner. It perfectly nails the industrial space trucker aesthetic of Dark Star or the original Alien film, in its sense of being lived in but not cared for. That’s particularly important because you’re going to be seeing it from very close up.

The first thing you learn in your cell is how to stand on tip toe, crouch, lean, and lie completely flat. Each movement is accompanied by your character’s involuntary grunts as you make him stand, squat, and crawl about on the floor, the motion of your point of view and the stunning detail of the environment creating a gritty realism that extends to un-collected litter and detritus, that’s accumulated in the gap underneath the metallic wall-hanging cupboards and infrastructure.

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As you find your way round the room, what initially appeared to be almost completely featureless actually turns out to be loaded with information. You’re an IT technician hired by Union Plaza’s lunar operation to debug their malfunctioning security system, and without further instruction you’ll need to work out what you have to do to find a way out of this claustrophobic little space. It’s perfect training for the rest of the game, which continues in its steadfast refusal to lead you by the hand.

If you’re weary of quest markers and HUD bloat, Routine is the antidote. Its entire overlay consists of a single tiny white circle that only appears when you’re pointing directly at something you can interact with. Apart from that, you’re on your own. Quite literally as it turns out, because other than a distorted, malfunctioning welcome message played over crackling speakers, the place is desolately empty.

Your only help comes from a C.A.T., or Cosmonaut Assistance Tool. It looks like a chunky plastic 1980s camcorder, complete with laggy analogue screen on the back that updates fractionally after you move it, delivering a flawless impression of dated technology. Initially it doesn’t seem to do much, but after a little experimentation you find out that it combines a PDA that’s only available near specific wireless access points, with the ability to short circuit electrical systems.

To make your way through the godforsaken depths of Union Plaza, you’ll need to pay extremely close attention to your surroundings, trying things out and extrapolating from subtle cues. In most games if you needed to find a fuse box to open a jammed bulkhead, you’d follow a waypoint to a brightly coloured box with a lightning symbol on it. That’s not how Routine works, making it feel far more like being stuck in an actual abandoned commercial facility. Progress feels hard earned and significant.

It’s also impeded by the security system you’re there to repair, which has erroneously gone into lockdown mode. Along with sealed doors and key code secured lifts, you’ll find the facility patrolled by Type-05s. They’re humanoid robots that look like the Terminator without its human skin, their aggressive metallic stomping signalling their approach and departure. They’ll often just stop and power down, sometimes facing a wall, before starting up again without warning and continuing their patrol.

Routine screenshot of a friendly robot
Not all robots are unfriendly (Raw Fury)

If one spots you, they’ll walk towards you at that same brisk but relentless pace, leaving you to scurry away and try to find a hiding place. Pointing your C.A.T. at one and pulling the trigger stuns it, but only for a second or two, after which it simply resumes its pursuit. The other bad news is that at full charge your C.A.T. has three shots, and while you can find new batteries you have to search for them.

The atmosphere of dread it manages to create is enhanced by exceptional sound design. The clank of the Type-05s is accompanied by whining servos and humming clicks as they project laser grids on floors and walls, digitally scouring your last known location. Doors swish shut, their motorised travel accompanied by seals that lock into place, followed by a dampening of the soundscape in the newly constricted space you occupy. Along with your character’s ragged breathing, and the sensation of peeping around the weathered metal of a doorframe as you try and spot a pursuing robot, it evokes a real sense of being there.

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Nervously making your way past the discarded VHS tapes, ‘Final price cut!’ banners, and tawdry ‘Megazone’ arcade in Union Plaza’s mall, you soon find out there’s far worse to come as you descend into the bowels of the facility. The elegiac email conversations you uncover reveal a spreading sickness amongst the staff and you wonder where everyone is, and why the head of security’s been drawing so many pictures of flowers. You soon come to yearn for the relative security of those early scenes.

Routine’s strength is the ambience its near photorealistic visuals and immaculately crafted sound design create. Its weakness is that the stubborn refusal to help can leave you stuck for longer than you might like. In a single room. with nothing trying to disembowel you, that’s an interesting conundrum but later on, in more open parts of the complex, it can be frustrating trying to figure out what tiny thing you’ve missed, and where exactly it might be.

Still, for a game so long in development this is a frightening, idiosyncratic, and impressively coherent slab of sci-fi survival horror. Announced just before Alien Isolation was released, you can see some of its inspiration here, but Routine’s more robust puzzles and multiple pursuers make it a more varied experience, while its mise en scène, glorious diegetic sound effects, and the humanistic motion of your character create an unsettlingly authentic sense of presence it in its terrifying world.

Routine review summary

In Short: A scary, atmospheric, and cleverly designed survival horror, whose photorealistic visuals and superb sound design help overcome some occasional frustrations.

Pros: Incredible atmosphere and sense of immersion. Treats you like an adult by letting you work things out for yourself. First person motion makes you feel unusually immersed in the game.

Cons: Can be annoying when it’s unclear what subtly framed clue you must have missed and, as in Alien Isolation, being chased by stuff you can’t kill can be frustrating.

Score: 8/10

Formats: Xbox Series X/S (reviewed), Xbox One, and PC
Price: TBA
Publisher: Raw Fury
Developer: Lunar Software
Release Date: 4th December 2025
Age Rating: 16

Routine screenshot of pipes
Photorealistic isn’t always pretty (Raw Fury)

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