Skip to main content

PC cult classic Pathologic 2 is getting a sequel with time travel

Pathologic 3 Announce Trailer

Pathologic 2 is a cult classic PC horror game, and it’s going to get a sequel. Publisher HypeTrain Digital announced Monday that Pathologic 3 from Russian developer Ice-Pick Lodge is in the works, and is set for release on Steam in 2025.

Recommended Videos

In the first Pathologic, released in 2005, players could choose between one of three characters: the Bachelor, the Changeling, or the Haruspex. While Pathologic 2 does have a number in the title, it’s a remake/reimagining/redo of the first game, and defaults to having you play the Haruspex. Pathologic 3 is following this pattern but letting you play the Bachelor, which means that a potential Pathologic 4 will put you into the shoes of the Changeling. All three are doctors with unique backstories and connections to the town who seek to save it from a brutal plague (also class warfare) in 12 days.

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming
Check your inbox!

That premise will continue in Pathologic 3, but with a new time travel twist that’ll let the player rewind or fast-forward through those 12 days so that you can get the “best” outcome. While a time travel mechanic will be new for the sequel, there has already been time travel in the games. Pathologic 2 starts off with the Haruspex failing a run to save the town and requesting another, so time is reset.

“We can describe the concept of this mechanic as surrealist time management. Our goal is to give the player a sense that time is more complex than we typically perceive it—as a linear path,” game director Nikolay Dybowski said in a press release.

Another difference is how your character will be viewed by the town’s residents. In Pathologic 2, the Haruspex is on the run for suspected murder. In Pathologic 3, the Bachelor appears to become the town doctor. A press release says you’ll “immerse yourself in the role of a physician,” making health decisions for people in the town and fighting the plague on your own terms.

The Pathologic series isn’t the most accessible. The gameplay is clunky, its story is abstract, and its characters are uncanny. That said, there are few PC games out there like it, both in its combination of horror, RPG, and immersive sim elements, and its crushing bleakness. If you’re interested, start with Pathologic 2 to experience the best version of its ideas.

Carli Velocci
Carli is a technology, culture, and games editor and journalist. They were the Gaming Lead and Copy Chief at Windows Central…
Can you use PSVR2 on PC?
The back of a man's head wearing the PSVR2.

There are now a decent number of VR headsets on the market, and the newest headset on the block, the PlayStation VR2, is one of the most powerful in terms of technology. This upgrade from the original PSVR makes many improvements over the original design, including trimming down the necessary cables to a single USB-C. Being the only headset on the market made by a console maker, many PC gamers may be wondering if the PSVR2 would be a worthy investment if they could also use it on their PCs.

If you're mainly a PC gamer, or have yet to get your hands on a PlayStation 5, and are interested in the PSVR2, here's whether or not it will work on other hardware.
Does PSVR2 work on PC?

Read more
Wolfenstein 3D and more classic Bethesda games join PC Game Pass
classic bethesda games pc game pass quake champions

Bethesda has announced that it added six titles to the PC Game Pass service today, most of which are from the 1990s or early 2000s. However, there is no word about them being included on Xbox Game Pass for console or cloud.

The six new games include Wolfenstein 3D, Return to Castle Wolfenstein, Quake 4, Quake Champions, An Elder Scrolls Legend: Battlespire, and The Elder Scrolls Adventures: Redguard.

Read more
PC Building Simulator 2 is Guitar Hero for nerds
A custom PC in PC Building Simulator 2.

I've been building PCs for most of my life, so PC Building Simulator was never a game I actively sought out. I've played it dozens of times for hours on end, but it was more a social experience -- a game I'd boot up when friends were over to mess around or gawk over expensive graphics cards that we only wish we could afford.

PC Building Simulator 2, now in open beta on the Epic Games Store, isn't any different. It's Guitar Hero for PC enthusiasts, leaning more heavily on being a game than being a tool for learning how to build a PC. As someone who tenses up at too much thermal paste, I expected for PC Building Simulator 2 to disappoint me, but it didn't -- despite some gamified elements getting in the way of actually building a PC.
Becoming a nerdy rock star

Read more