The 17 Most Underrated Horror Films of the 1980s

These 1980s horror films that will make you quake, shake, and beg for more.
OdinOdin Odin (147)
Jan 20, 2022
0

The 1980s offered the world a different type of horror than had been seen before, or since. A perfect slurry of technological advancements, to political climates, to shifting cultural landscapes offered the horror genre fertile ground in which to sow its malevolent seed… and sow it did, with abandon, churning out some of the greatest classic franchises of all time and offering up a world of nightmares for audiences around the globe.

Just as the original birth of horror films arose out of the real-world horror birthed in the trenches of World War I, 1980s horror matured within a stark landscape. There was the paranoid politics of the neoliberal capitalist craze, the culmination of many decades of Cold War and the threat of nuclear annihilation, the rise of rampant consumerism and new technologies, and the rise of the AIDS epidemic that would go on to claim over half a million lives and impact countless more. These all fueled a weariness and subconscious darkness that still lurks in the Western world today.

That sort of psychological pressure needs a release valve, a way for people to externalize and understand what is occurring, and the horror genre provides a ready-made set of symbols from which to build this reflective map of our collective psyche. Everything from They Live (1988), to _Windows (1980) offer a view into the crisis of the time.

Some horror, Windows in particular, strike at a different chord: a surge of repressiveness aimed at the LGBTQ+ community (though not always with that intention). Indeed, a reaction against earlier counterculture movements can be seen sharply in many of these films, with conservative values oddly standing in the blood-runneled background. But there were surges against this as well, moments of breakthrough that took jabs at the status quo and the deliverers of a new brutal economic and social order.

Within all of this, a great sense of style also emerged, building on the latest technology to form reality from the unimaginable; to take formless fear and give it form, provide it shape within the prosthetics, lighting, and molded plastics of the age. This great aesthetic, cultivated in the horror of the 1980s, remains with us today, and adds to the nostalgia of the era with its over-bright film stock and its synth-rock overtones.

Posted in these interests:
h/history18 guides
Pop CulturePop Culture
h/popculture96 guides
moviesmovies
h/movies26 guides
Silver Bullet (1985)Silver Bullet (1985)
Silver Bullet (1985)
Director Actors
Dan Attias Corey Haim, Gary Busey, Everett McGill, Megan Follows, Terry O’Quinn, Lawrence Tierney, Bill Smitrovich, Kent Broadhurst, David Hart, and James Gammon

When a small town is terrorized by a mysterious killer, it’s up to one wheelchair-bound boy to save them from a terror they can’t imagine.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Silver Bullet (1985)

Silver Bullet (1985) is based on a (1983) Stephen King novella (Cycle of the Werewolf), this little gem often gets forgotten in the mix of all the other film adaptations of his work. Since the screenplay is actually written by King, though, you know you’re in for something good.

Far From Home (1989)Far From Home (1989)
Far From Home (1989)
Director Actors
Meiert Avis Drew Barrymore, Matt Frewer, Richard Masur, and Jennifer Tilly

A teenage girl finds herself the center of attention, but of the two boys in her life, one just might be a killer.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Far From Home (1989)

Far From Home (1989) was a massive hit not only because 13-year-old Barrymore is incredible in the spotlight, but because the whole film is snappy, dark, and clever.

Pumpkinhead (1988)Pumpkinhead (1988)
Pumpkinhead (1988)
Director Actors
Stan Winston Lance Henriksen, Jeff East, John D’Aquino, Joel Hoffman, Brian Bremer

When a teenage prank leads to the death of a young boy, the boy’s father sets out on a path of vengeance, summoning a dark creature from the very pits of Hell.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Pumpkinhead (1988)

Pumpkinhead (1988) is one film that probably a few more mainstream viewers have encountered, but it’s still one that too-frequently flies beneath the radar, considering just how darn cheesy and scary it is.

Bad Taste (1987)Bad Taste (1987)
Bad Taste (1987)
Director Actors
Peter Jackson Terry Potter, Pete O’Herne, Peter Jackson, Mike Minett, Craig Smith

Something is wrong in a small New Zealand town… something alien. But four men with big guns are there to set things right.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Bad Taste (1987)

Bad Taste (1987) begins one of the strangest and wildest directorial careers in history. From this low budget cult-comedy gore-flick, to one of the largest and most expensive film franchises ever made, Peter Jackson’s career is unexplainable and wonderful.

Razorback (1984)Razorback (1984)
Razorback (1984)
Director Actors
Russell Mulcahy Gregory Harrison, Arkie Whiteley

A dark creature stalks the Australian outback, terrorizing and devouring all who encounter it.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Razorback (1984)

Razorback (1984) was based on a 1981 novel by Peter Brennan and carries a massive host of monstrous moments, not all to do with the supernatural creature at the story’s heart. After all, human monsters are the worst of all.

Corpse Mania (1981)Corpse Mania (1981)
Corpse Mania (1981)
Director Actors
Chih-Hung Kuei Ni Tien, Jung Wang, Tsui-Ling Yu

A necrophiliac killer is murdering the prostitutes at Madame Lan’s brothel.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Corpse Mania (1981)

Corpse Mania (1981) is an example of some seriously bleak and wickedly gory horror that arose out of the Hong Kong film industry. There’s a certain extremely darkly comic note at play here, but overall, it’s just-plain-messed-up. The atmosphere that this one creates is unforgettable, however.

Society (1989)Society (1989)
Society (1989)
Director Actors
Brian Yuzna Billy Warlock, Devin DeVasquez, Evan Richards, and Ben Meyerson

Beverly Hills is built on the back of the poor, but the class divide might be even sharper than anyone knows. For young Billy, one thing is certain: these people aren’t who he thought they were… either that, or he’s losing his mind.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Society (1989)

Society (1989) is prime horror-satire, which is my preferred form of horror by far. Horror tackles real-world subjects incredibly well, and this little gem came at a time of great fracture in the world, when Regan and Thatcher policies were destroying the remaining social safety nets and things were looking bleak under threat of the Cold War. A little like now, actually. Anyway, horror took the angst of that era and distilled it, and in Society the distillation is superb.

Evil Dead Trap (1988)Evil Dead Trap (1988)
Evil Dead Trap (1988)
Director Actors
Toshiharu Ikeda Miyuki Ono

A TV show host asks her viewers to send in home videos, but one of them sends her a snuff film, apparently shot in a nearby abandoned factory. Her film crew in tow, she sets out to investigate, but the scoop she finds may be more than she bargained for.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Evil Dead Trap (1988)

Evil Dead Trap (1988) (Shiryō no wana in Japan), takes the Giallo genre, slaps it together with bloody slasher surrealism, and packages it all up to go amid an eerie landscape of half-hidden shots and a leering, hidden danger.

Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983)Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983)
Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983)
Director Actors
Jack Clayton Jason Robards, Jonathan Pryce, Diane Ladd, and Pam Grier

A mysterious train comes to town on the back of an autumnal wind; a mirror-maze whispers to all who enter it of their deepest desires, and two young boys find themselves up against forces beyond their comprehension.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983)

Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983) is based on Ray Bradbury’s novel of the same name and, honestly, … go read the novel first. It’s one of his best, and you’ll get so much more of the original intensity and vibe from that than from this film. That said, if you’ve already read the book, you’ll likely find this early Disney foray into the dark and strange something fascinating.

The Caller (1987)The Caller (1987)
The Caller (1987)
Director Actors
Arthur Allan Seidelman Malcolm McDowell, Madolyn Smith Osborne

A young woman and a mysterious man meet at a cabin in the woods. Neither is what they seem, both know the other is lying, but what they want from one another is the greatest unknown.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
The Caller (1987)

The Caller (1987) is delightfully twisted and clever, doing more with two primary actors and a couple of simple locations than most do with blockbuster budgets. Of course, Malcolm McDowell brings his unique shade of unsettling to this piece, but Osborne’s no slouch either, and they play off one another beautifully.

The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)​The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)​
The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)​
Director Actors
Amy Holden Jones Michelle Michaels, Robin Stille, and Michael Villella

A high school senior and her friends are having a slumber party, but someone’s planning on party crashing and giving the girls the last time of their life.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)​

The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)​ could have been one of the great early satirical horror films, if not for the lousy infestation of the studio producers who got in the way. They forced the satirical script to be shot like a standard slasher, cutting out the heart of what made the writing so great. Written by Rita Mae Brown, and directed by Amy Jones, this female-led production was a break in the patriarchal norm of that era’s horror films, and even though the producers messed things up, the wittiness of the original script shines through.

The Outing (1987)The Outing (1987)
The Outing (1987)
Director Actors
Tom Daley Deborah Winters, James Huston, Andra St. Ivanyi, Scott Bankston, and Red Mitchell

An ancient evil is released from a magical lamp, and the malevolent creature stalks a group of teenagers through the dark halls of a museum of natural history.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
The Outing (1987)

The Outing (1987) was originally released as The Lamp in the United Kingdom, but received a new name and two minutes of weird cuts for the U.S. version. The film is basically 100% cheese, with enough titillation and ridiculous horror to satisfy anyone who needs a laugh and a few chills. It’s not the greatest film of all time, but it’s a perfect Grade-C horror film.

Mr. Wrong (1984)Mr. Wrong (1984)
Mr. Wrong (1984)
Director Actors
Gaylene Preston Heather Bolton, David Letch

When a woman moves from her rural home to the big city, she purchases a new car, but quickly finds that her new ride harbors a dark secret.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Mr. Wrong (1984)

Mr. Wrong (1984) is whimsical, atmospheric, and honestly superb. It’s one of those little gems that doesn’t require a big budget to do something superb.

Windows (1980)Windows (1980)
Windows (1980)
Director Actors
Gordon Willis Talia Shire, Joseph Cortese, and Elizabeth Ashley

A woman is attacked by a man and fears for her life, but an even more alarming discovery awaits right around the corner.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Windows (1980)

Windows (1980) is an admittedly bad film, so “underrated” hardly fits in the broadest sense. The fact that this film is basically a collection of outmoded and icky lesbian stereotypes, thrown together by a lackluster plot, means that its critics are spot-on. However, Gordon Willis was the director, and his eye is everywhere in the cinematography of this film. Added to that are some solid performances by the lead actors. This one might be underrated more in the sense of if you’re a film student, it’s worth watching, but that still bears repeating.

The Keep (1983)The Keep (1983)
The Keep (1983)
Director Actors
Michael Mann Scott Glenn, Gabriel Byrne, Jürgen Prochnow, Alberta Watson and Ian McKellen

During World War II, in German-occupied Romania, Nazi soldiers have been sent to garrison a mysterious fortress. But something incomprehensible lurks at the heart of the Keep, and soon the soldiers realize that it was not built to keep something in, but to stop something from getting out.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
The Keep (1983)

The Keep (1983) is based on the 1981 F. Paul Wilson novel of the same name and is easily one of the most underrated horror films of all time. Partly, that’s due to the massive productions problems that arose during filming, and the horrible decision by the studio executives to make unnecessary and damaging cuts to the final release. Despite the film originally being 3.5 hours long, the Paramount version was cut to 96 minutes. Sadly, we’ll probably never get a fully remastered version of the original material, but what we do have remains one of the most atmospheric and twisted dark WWII fairy tales to ever exist.

The House Where Evil Dwells (1982)The House Where Evil Dwells (1982)
The House Where Evil Dwells (1982)
Director Actors
Kevin Connor Edward Albert, Susan George, and Doug McClure

An American family move to a house in Japan, a house haunted by an affair and dark deeds done beneath the sway of lust and vengeance. Now, those demons are coming back to haunt the living.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
The House Where Evil Dwells (1982)

The House Where Evil Dwells (1982) offers a wild mix of blood, terror, and eroticism — all hallmarks of the horror genre — and weaves them into a clever ghost fable that never got the love it deserved.

My Bloody Valentine (1981)My Bloody Valentine (1981)
My Bloody Valentine (1981)
Director Actors
George Mihalka Paul Kelman, Lori Hallier, and Neil Affleck

Twenty years ago, mine supervisors abandoned their posts and let five miners die. Since then, no Valentine’s Day party has been held… until now. A group of teens sets out to enjoy the spark of a Valentine’s Day dance, only to find a wrathful figure stalking their every move.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
My Bloody Valentine (1981)

My Bloody Valentine (1981) is Quentin Tarantino’s favorite slasher film, which I’m not sure is a recommendation for or against. There is definitely something a little different about it, though; it’s more restrained in some ways, more violent in others, and it offers exactly what you paid for whilst still managing to offer you the bleakest slasher experience around.

The age of NetflixThe age of Netflix
The age of Netflix

Once upon a time, Netflix’s DVD library hosted well over 100,000 titles and sent out roughly 12 million DVDs per week. Now, with the advent of easy-to-use streaming services, the amount of content viewers have available has shrunk to the low thousands. Look up any list of “films to watch” and you’ll find a tiny selection of movies, usually curated by people all reading the same lists and commenting on the exact same hot new show or film.

But, is that all there is? With over a hundred years of incredible filmmaking on the planet, isn’t there something missed when we only pay attention to the latest and greatest? This series is dedicated to answering that question and to exploring a small handful of the unsung films from decades past. I’ll examine each decade in turn, all the way back to the earliest days of film, and I’ll be exploring every genre of film there is! From science fiction, to drama, to romance, to comedy—I’m going to cover the entirety of film history for you, bringing out the golden nuggets for you to enjoy.

As always, with these articles, I love hearing your feedback in the comments section, or on Twitter @indubitablyodin. Let me know what your favorite films of the decade were, which ones you think I should have included, and which you hope I’ll mention in one of my next decades!

How many did you believe?
BrittBritt Britt (137)
Dec 9, 2021
0

Over the centuries, many words, phrases, and proverbs have become famous and used widely all over the world.

The 17 Most Underrated Horror Films of the 1980s

These 1980s horror films that will make you quake, shake, and beg for more.
OdinOdin Odin (147)
Jan 20, 2022
0

The 1980s offered the world a different type of horror than had been seen before, or since. A perfect slurry of technological advancements, to political climates, to shifting cultural landscapes offered the horror genre fertile ground in which to sow its malevolent seed… and sow it did, with abandon, churning out some of the greatest classic franchises of all time and offering up a world of nightmares for audiences around the globe.

Just as the original birth of horror films arose out of the real-world horror birthed in the trenches of World War I, 1980s horror matured within a stark landscape. There was the paranoid politics of the neoliberal capitalist craze, the culmination of many decades of Cold War and the threat of nuclear annihilation, the rise of rampant consumerism and new technologies, and the rise of the AIDS epidemic that would go on to claim over half a million lives and impact countless more. These all fueled a weariness and subconscious darkness that still lurks in the Western world today.

That sort of psychological pressure needs a release valve, a way for people to externalize and understand what is occurring, and the horror genre provides a ready-made set of symbols from which to build this reflective map of our collective psyche. Everything from They Live (1988), to _Windows (1980) offer a view into the crisis of the time.

Some horror, Windows in particular, strike at a different chord: a surge of repressiveness aimed at the LGBTQ+ community (though not always with that intention). Indeed, a reaction against earlier counterculture movements can be seen sharply in many of these films, with conservative values oddly standing in the blood-runneled background. But there were surges against this as well, moments of breakthrough that took jabs at the status quo and the deliverers of a new brutal economic and social order.

Within all of this, a great sense of style also emerged, building on the latest technology to form reality from the unimaginable; to take formless fear and give it form, provide it shape within the prosthetics, lighting, and molded plastics of the age. This great aesthetic, cultivated in the horror of the 1980s, remains with us today, and adds to the nostalgia of the era with its over-bright film stock and its synth-rock overtones.

Posted in these interests:
h/history18 guides
Pop CulturePop Culture
h/popculture96 guides
moviesmovies
h/movies26 guides
Silver Bullet (1985)Silver Bullet (1985)
Silver Bullet (1985)
Director Actors
Dan Attias Corey Haim, Gary Busey, Everett McGill, Megan Follows, Terry O’Quinn, Lawrence Tierney, Bill Smitrovich, Kent Broadhurst, David Hart, and James Gammon

When a small town is terrorized by a mysterious killer, it’s up to one wheelchair-bound boy to save them from a terror they can’t imagine.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Silver Bullet (1985)

Silver Bullet (1985) is based on a (1983) Stephen King novella (Cycle of the Werewolf), this little gem often gets forgotten in the mix of all the other film adaptations of his work. Since the screenplay is actually written by King, though, you know you’re in for something good.

Far From Home (1989)Far From Home (1989)
Far From Home (1989)
Director Actors
Meiert Avis Drew Barrymore, Matt Frewer, Richard Masur, and Jennifer Tilly

A teenage girl finds herself the center of attention, but of the two boys in her life, one just might be a killer.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Far From Home (1989)

Far From Home (1989) was a massive hit not only because 13-year-old Barrymore is incredible in the spotlight, but because the whole film is snappy, dark, and clever.

Pumpkinhead (1988)Pumpkinhead (1988)
Pumpkinhead (1988)
Director Actors
Stan Winston Lance Henriksen, Jeff East, John D’Aquino, Joel Hoffman, Brian Bremer

When a teenage prank leads to the death of a young boy, the boy’s father sets out on a path of vengeance, summoning a dark creature from the very pits of Hell.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Pumpkinhead (1988)

Pumpkinhead (1988) is one film that probably a few more mainstream viewers have encountered, but it’s still one that too-frequently flies beneath the radar, considering just how darn cheesy and scary it is.

Bad Taste (1987)Bad Taste (1987)
Bad Taste (1987)
Director Actors
Peter Jackson Terry Potter, Pete O’Herne, Peter Jackson, Mike Minett, Craig Smith

Something is wrong in a small New Zealand town… something alien. But four men with big guns are there to set things right.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Bad Taste (1987)

Bad Taste (1987) begins one of the strangest and wildest directorial careers in history. From this low budget cult-comedy gore-flick, to one of the largest and most expensive film franchises ever made, Peter Jackson’s career is unexplainable and wonderful.

Razorback (1984)Razorback (1984)
Razorback (1984)
Director Actors
Russell Mulcahy Gregory Harrison, Arkie Whiteley

A dark creature stalks the Australian outback, terrorizing and devouring all who encounter it.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Razorback (1984)

Razorback (1984) was based on a 1981 novel by Peter Brennan and carries a massive host of monstrous moments, not all to do with the supernatural creature at the story’s heart. After all, human monsters are the worst of all.

Corpse Mania (1981)Corpse Mania (1981)
Corpse Mania (1981)
Director Actors
Chih-Hung Kuei Ni Tien, Jung Wang, Tsui-Ling Yu

A necrophiliac killer is murdering the prostitutes at Madame Lan’s brothel.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Corpse Mania (1981)

Corpse Mania (1981) is an example of some seriously bleak and wickedly gory horror that arose out of the Hong Kong film industry. There’s a certain extremely darkly comic note at play here, but overall, it’s just-plain-messed-up. The atmosphere that this one creates is unforgettable, however.

Society (1989)Society (1989)
Society (1989)
Director Actors
Brian Yuzna Billy Warlock, Devin DeVasquez, Evan Richards, and Ben Meyerson

Beverly Hills is built on the back of the poor, but the class divide might be even sharper than anyone knows. For young Billy, one thing is certain: these people aren’t who he thought they were… either that, or he’s losing his mind.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Society (1989)

Society (1989) is prime horror-satire, which is my preferred form of horror by far. Horror tackles real-world subjects incredibly well, and this little gem came at a time of great fracture in the world, when Regan and Thatcher policies were destroying the remaining social safety nets and things were looking bleak under threat of the Cold War. A little like now, actually. Anyway, horror took the angst of that era and distilled it, and in Society the distillation is superb.

Evil Dead Trap (1988)Evil Dead Trap (1988)
Evil Dead Trap (1988)
Director Actors
Toshiharu Ikeda Miyuki Ono

A TV show host asks her viewers to send in home videos, but one of them sends her a snuff film, apparently shot in a nearby abandoned factory. Her film crew in tow, she sets out to investigate, but the scoop she finds may be more than she bargained for.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Evil Dead Trap (1988)

Evil Dead Trap (1988) (Shiryō no wana in Japan), takes the Giallo genre, slaps it together with bloody slasher surrealism, and packages it all up to go amid an eerie landscape of half-hidden shots and a leering, hidden danger.

Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983)Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983)
Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983)
Director Actors
Jack Clayton Jason Robards, Jonathan Pryce, Diane Ladd, and Pam Grier

A mysterious train comes to town on the back of an autumnal wind; a mirror-maze whispers to all who enter it of their deepest desires, and two young boys find themselves up against forces beyond their comprehension.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983)

Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983) is based on Ray Bradbury’s novel of the same name and, honestly, … go read the novel first. It’s one of his best, and you’ll get so much more of the original intensity and vibe from that than from this film. That said, if you’ve already read the book, you’ll likely find this early Disney foray into the dark and strange something fascinating.

The Caller (1987)The Caller (1987)
The Caller (1987)
Director Actors
Arthur Allan Seidelman Malcolm McDowell, Madolyn Smith Osborne

A young woman and a mysterious man meet at a cabin in the woods. Neither is what they seem, both know the other is lying, but what they want from one another is the greatest unknown.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
The Caller (1987)

The Caller (1987) is delightfully twisted and clever, doing more with two primary actors and a couple of simple locations than most do with blockbuster budgets. Of course, Malcolm McDowell brings his unique shade of unsettling to this piece, but Osborne’s no slouch either, and they play off one another beautifully.

The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)​The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)​
The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)​
Director Actors
Amy Holden Jones Michelle Michaels, Robin Stille, and Michael Villella

A high school senior and her friends are having a slumber party, but someone’s planning on party crashing and giving the girls the last time of their life.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)​

The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)​ could have been one of the great early satirical horror films, if not for the lousy infestation of the studio producers who got in the way. They forced the satirical script to be shot like a standard slasher, cutting out the heart of what made the writing so great. Written by Rita Mae Brown, and directed by Amy Jones, this female-led production was a break in the patriarchal norm of that era’s horror films, and even though the producers messed things up, the wittiness of the original script shines through.

The Outing (1987)The Outing (1987)
The Outing (1987)
Director Actors
Tom Daley Deborah Winters, James Huston, Andra St. Ivanyi, Scott Bankston, and Red Mitchell

An ancient evil is released from a magical lamp, and the malevolent creature stalks a group of teenagers through the dark halls of a museum of natural history.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
The Outing (1987)

The Outing (1987) was originally released as The Lamp in the United Kingdom, but received a new name and two minutes of weird cuts for the U.S. version. The film is basically 100% cheese, with enough titillation and ridiculous horror to satisfy anyone who needs a laugh and a few chills. It’s not the greatest film of all time, but it’s a perfect Grade-C horror film.

Mr. Wrong (1984)Mr. Wrong (1984)
Mr. Wrong (1984)
Director Actors
Gaylene Preston Heather Bolton, David Letch

When a woman moves from her rural home to the big city, she purchases a new car, but quickly finds that her new ride harbors a dark secret.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Mr. Wrong (1984)

Mr. Wrong (1984) is whimsical, atmospheric, and honestly superb. It’s one of those little gems that doesn’t require a big budget to do something superb.

Windows (1980)Windows (1980)
Windows (1980)
Director Actors
Gordon Willis Talia Shire, Joseph Cortese, and Elizabeth Ashley

A woman is attacked by a man and fears for her life, but an even more alarming discovery awaits right around the corner.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Windows (1980)

Windows (1980) is an admittedly bad film, so “underrated” hardly fits in the broadest sense. The fact that this film is basically a collection of outmoded and icky lesbian stereotypes, thrown together by a lackluster plot, means that its critics are spot-on. However, Gordon Willis was the director, and his eye is everywhere in the cinematography of this film. Added to that are some solid performances by the lead actors. This one might be underrated more in the sense of if you’re a film student, it’s worth watching, but that still bears repeating.

The Keep (1983)The Keep (1983)
The Keep (1983)
Director Actors
Michael Mann Scott Glenn, Gabriel Byrne, Jürgen Prochnow, Alberta Watson and Ian McKellen

During World War II, in German-occupied Romania, Nazi soldiers have been sent to garrison a mysterious fortress. But something incomprehensible lurks at the heart of the Keep, and soon the soldiers realize that it was not built to keep something in, but to stop something from getting out.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
The Keep (1983)

The Keep (1983) is based on the 1981 F. Paul Wilson novel of the same name and is easily one of the most underrated horror films of all time. Partly, that’s due to the massive productions problems that arose during filming, and the horrible decision by the studio executives to make unnecessary and damaging cuts to the final release. Despite the film originally being 3.5 hours long, the Paramount version was cut to 96 minutes. Sadly, we’ll probably never get a fully remastered version of the original material, but what we do have remains one of the most atmospheric and twisted dark WWII fairy tales to ever exist.

The House Where Evil Dwells (1982)The House Where Evil Dwells (1982)
The House Where Evil Dwells (1982)
Director Actors
Kevin Connor Edward Albert, Susan George, and Doug McClure

An American family move to a house in Japan, a house haunted by an affair and dark deeds done beneath the sway of lust and vengeance. Now, those demons are coming back to haunt the living.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
The House Where Evil Dwells (1982)

The House Where Evil Dwells (1982) offers a wild mix of blood, terror, and eroticism — all hallmarks of the horror genre — and weaves them into a clever ghost fable that never got the love it deserved.

My Bloody Valentine (1981)My Bloody Valentine (1981)
My Bloody Valentine (1981)
Director Actors
George Mihalka Paul Kelman, Lori Hallier, and Neil Affleck

Twenty years ago, mine supervisors abandoned their posts and let five miners die. Since then, no Valentine’s Day party has been held… until now. A group of teens sets out to enjoy the spark of a Valentine’s Day dance, only to find a wrathful figure stalking their every move.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
My Bloody Valentine (1981)

My Bloody Valentine (1981) is Quentin Tarantino’s favorite slasher film, which I’m not sure is a recommendation for or against. There is definitely something a little different about it, though; it’s more restrained in some ways, more violent in others, and it offers exactly what you paid for whilst still managing to offer you the bleakest slasher experience around.

The age of NetflixThe age of Netflix
The age of Netflix

Once upon a time, Netflix’s DVD library hosted well over 100,000 titles and sent out roughly 12 million DVDs per week. Now, with the advent of easy-to-use streaming services, the amount of content viewers have available has shrunk to the low thousands. Look up any list of “films to watch” and you’ll find a tiny selection of movies, usually curated by people all reading the same lists and commenting on the exact same hot new show or film.

But, is that all there is? With over a hundred years of incredible filmmaking on the planet, isn’t there something missed when we only pay attention to the latest and greatest? This series is dedicated to answering that question and to exploring a small handful of the unsung films from decades past. I’ll examine each decade in turn, all the way back to the earliest days of film, and I’ll be exploring every genre of film there is! From science fiction, to drama, to romance, to comedy—I’m going to cover the entirety of film history for you, bringing out the golden nuggets for you to enjoy.

As always, with these articles, I love hearing your feedback in the comments section, or on Twitter @indubitablyodin. Let me know what your favorite films of the decade were, which ones you think I should have included, and which you hope I’ll mention in one of my next decades!

How many did you believe?
BrittBritt Britt (137)
Dec 9, 2021
0

Over the centuries, many words, phrases, and proverbs have become famous and used widely all over the world.

 

The 17 Most Underrated Horror Films of the 1980s

These 1980s horror films that will make you quake, shake, and beg for more.
OdinOdin Odin (147)
Jan 20, 2022
0

The 1980s offered the world a different type of horror than had been seen before, or since. A perfect slurry of technological advancements, to political climates, to shifting cultural landscapes offered the horror genre fertile ground in which to sow its malevolent seed… and sow it did, with abandon, churning out some of the greatest classic franchises of all time and offering up a world of nightmares for audiences around the globe.

Just as the original birth of horror films arose out of the real-world horror birthed in the trenches of World War I, 1980s horror matured within a stark landscape. There was the paranoid politics of the neoliberal capitalist craze, the culmination of many decades of Cold War and the threat of nuclear annihilation, the rise of rampant consumerism and new technologies, and the rise of the AIDS epidemic that would go on to claim over half a million lives and impact countless more. These all fueled a weariness and subconscious darkness that still lurks in the Western world today.

That sort of psychological pressure needs a release valve, a way for people to externalize and understand what is occurring, and the horror genre provides a ready-made set of symbols from which to build this reflective map of our collective psyche. Everything from They Live (1988), to _Windows (1980) offer a view into the crisis of the time.

Some horror, Windows in particular, strike at a different chord: a surge of repressiveness aimed at the LGBTQ+ community (though not always with that intention). Indeed, a reaction against earlier counterculture movements can be seen sharply in many of these films, with conservative values oddly standing in the blood-runneled background. But there were surges against this as well, moments of breakthrough that took jabs at the status quo and the deliverers of a new brutal economic and social order.

Within all of this, a great sense of style also emerged, building on the latest technology to form reality from the unimaginable; to take formless fear and give it form, provide it shape within the prosthetics, lighting, and molded plastics of the age. This great aesthetic, cultivated in the horror of the 1980s, remains with us today, and adds to the nostalgia of the era with its over-bright film stock and its synth-rock overtones.

Posted in these interests:
h/history18 guides
Pop CulturePop Culture
h/popculture96 guides
moviesmovies
h/movies26 guides
Silver Bullet (1985)Silver Bullet (1985)
Silver Bullet (1985)
Director Actors
Dan Attias Corey Haim, Gary Busey, Everett McGill, Megan Follows, Terry O’Quinn, Lawrence Tierney, Bill Smitrovich, Kent Broadhurst, David Hart, and James Gammon

When a small town is terrorized by a mysterious killer, it’s up to one wheelchair-bound boy to save them from a terror they can’t imagine.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Silver Bullet (1985)

Silver Bullet (1985) is based on a (1983) Stephen King novella (Cycle of the Werewolf), this little gem often gets forgotten in the mix of all the other film adaptations of his work. Since the screenplay is actually written by King, though, you know you’re in for something good.

Far From Home (1989)Far From Home (1989)
Far From Home (1989)
Director Actors
Meiert Avis Drew Barrymore, Matt Frewer, Richard Masur, and Jennifer Tilly

A teenage girl finds herself the center of attention, but of the two boys in her life, one just might be a killer.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Far From Home (1989)

Far From Home (1989) was a massive hit not only because 13-year-old Barrymore is incredible in the spotlight, but because the whole film is snappy, dark, and clever.

Pumpkinhead (1988)Pumpkinhead (1988)
Pumpkinhead (1988)
Director Actors
Stan Winston Lance Henriksen, Jeff East, John D’Aquino, Joel Hoffman, Brian Bremer

When a teenage prank leads to the death of a young boy, the boy’s father sets out on a path of vengeance, summoning a dark creature from the very pits of Hell.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Pumpkinhead (1988)

Pumpkinhead (1988) is one film that probably a few more mainstream viewers have encountered, but it’s still one that too-frequently flies beneath the radar, considering just how darn cheesy and scary it is.

Bad Taste (1987)Bad Taste (1987)
Bad Taste (1987)
Director Actors
Peter Jackson Terry Potter, Pete O’Herne, Peter Jackson, Mike Minett, Craig Smith

Something is wrong in a small New Zealand town… something alien. But four men with big guns are there to set things right.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Bad Taste (1987)

Bad Taste (1987) begins one of the strangest and wildest directorial careers in history. From this low budget cult-comedy gore-flick, to one of the largest and most expensive film franchises ever made, Peter Jackson’s career is unexplainable and wonderful.

Razorback (1984)Razorback (1984)
Razorback (1984)
Director Actors
Russell Mulcahy Gregory Harrison, Arkie Whiteley

A dark creature stalks the Australian outback, terrorizing and devouring all who encounter it.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Razorback (1984)

Razorback (1984) was based on a 1981 novel by Peter Brennan and carries a massive host of monstrous moments, not all to do with the supernatural creature at the story’s heart. After all, human monsters are the worst of all.

Corpse Mania (1981)Corpse Mania (1981)
Corpse Mania (1981)
Director Actors
Chih-Hung Kuei Ni Tien, Jung Wang, Tsui-Ling Yu

A necrophiliac killer is murdering the prostitutes at Madame Lan’s brothel.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Corpse Mania (1981)

Corpse Mania (1981) is an example of some seriously bleak and wickedly gory horror that arose out of the Hong Kong film industry. There’s a certain extremely darkly comic note at play here, but overall, it’s just-plain-messed-up. The atmosphere that this one creates is unforgettable, however.

Society (1989)Society (1989)
Society (1989)
Director Actors
Brian Yuzna Billy Warlock, Devin DeVasquez, Evan Richards, and Ben Meyerson

Beverly Hills is built on the back of the poor, but the class divide might be even sharper than anyone knows. For young Billy, one thing is certain: these people aren’t who he thought they were… either that, or he’s losing his mind.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Society (1989)

Society (1989) is prime horror-satire, which is my preferred form of horror by far. Horror tackles real-world subjects incredibly well, and this little gem came at a time of great fracture in the world, when Regan and Thatcher policies were destroying the remaining social safety nets and things were looking bleak under threat of the Cold War. A little like now, actually. Anyway, horror took the angst of that era and distilled it, and in Society the distillation is superb.

Evil Dead Trap (1988)Evil Dead Trap (1988)
Evil Dead Trap (1988)
Director Actors
Toshiharu Ikeda Miyuki Ono

A TV show host asks her viewers to send in home videos, but one of them sends her a snuff film, apparently shot in a nearby abandoned factory. Her film crew in tow, she sets out to investigate, but the scoop she finds may be more than she bargained for.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Evil Dead Trap (1988)

Evil Dead Trap (1988) (Shiryō no wana in Japan), takes the Giallo genre, slaps it together with bloody slasher surrealism, and packages it all up to go amid an eerie landscape of half-hidden shots and a leering, hidden danger.

Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983)Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983)
Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983)
Director Actors
Jack Clayton Jason Robards, Jonathan Pryce, Diane Ladd, and Pam Grier

A mysterious train comes to town on the back of an autumnal wind; a mirror-maze whispers to all who enter it of their deepest desires, and two young boys find themselves up against forces beyond their comprehension.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983)

Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983) is based on Ray Bradbury’s novel of the same name and, honestly, … go read the novel first. It’s one of his best, and you’ll get so much more of the original intensity and vibe from that than from this film. That said, if you’ve already read the book, you’ll likely find this early Disney foray into the dark and strange something fascinating.

The Caller (1987)The Caller (1987)
The Caller (1987)
Director Actors
Arthur Allan Seidelman Malcolm McDowell, Madolyn Smith Osborne

A young woman and a mysterious man meet at a cabin in the woods. Neither is what they seem, both know the other is lying, but what they want from one another is the greatest unknown.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
The Caller (1987)

The Caller (1987) is delightfully twisted and clever, doing more with two primary actors and a couple of simple locations than most do with blockbuster budgets. Of course, Malcolm McDowell brings his unique shade of unsettling to this piece, but Osborne’s no slouch either, and they play off one another beautifully.

The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)​The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)​
The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)​
Director Actors
Amy Holden Jones Michelle Michaels, Robin Stille, and Michael Villella

A high school senior and her friends are having a slumber party, but someone’s planning on party crashing and giving the girls the last time of their life.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)​

The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)​ could have been one of the great early satirical horror films, if not for the lousy infestation of the studio producers who got in the way. They forced the satirical script to be shot like a standard slasher, cutting out the heart of what made the writing so great. Written by Rita Mae Brown, and directed by Amy Jones, this female-led production was a break in the patriarchal norm of that era’s horror films, and even though the producers messed things up, the wittiness of the original script shines through.

The Outing (1987)The Outing (1987)
The Outing (1987)
Director Actors
Tom Daley Deborah Winters, James Huston, Andra St. Ivanyi, Scott Bankston, and Red Mitchell

An ancient evil is released from a magical lamp, and the malevolent creature stalks a group of teenagers through the dark halls of a museum of natural history.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
The Outing (1987)

The Outing (1987) was originally released as The Lamp in the United Kingdom, but received a new name and two minutes of weird cuts for the U.S. version. The film is basically 100% cheese, with enough titillation and ridiculous horror to satisfy anyone who needs a laugh and a few chills. It’s not the greatest film of all time, but it’s a perfect Grade-C horror film.

Mr. Wrong (1984)Mr. Wrong (1984)
Mr. Wrong (1984)
Director Actors
Gaylene Preston Heather Bolton, David Letch

When a woman moves from her rural home to the big city, she purchases a new car, but quickly finds that her new ride harbors a dark secret.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Mr. Wrong (1984)

Mr. Wrong (1984) is whimsical, atmospheric, and honestly superb. It’s one of those little gems that doesn’t require a big budget to do something superb.

Windows (1980)Windows (1980)
Windows (1980)
Director Actors
Gordon Willis Talia Shire, Joseph Cortese, and Elizabeth Ashley

A woman is attacked by a man and fears for her life, but an even more alarming discovery awaits right around the corner.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Windows (1980)

Windows (1980) is an admittedly bad film, so “underrated” hardly fits in the broadest sense. The fact that this film is basically a collection of outmoded and icky lesbian stereotypes, thrown together by a lackluster plot, means that its critics are spot-on. However, Gordon Willis was the director, and his eye is everywhere in the cinematography of this film. Added to that are some solid performances by the lead actors. This one might be underrated more in the sense of if you’re a film student, it’s worth watching, but that still bears repeating.

The Keep (1983)The Keep (1983)
The Keep (1983)
Director Actors
Michael Mann Scott Glenn, Gabriel Byrne, Jürgen Prochnow, Alberta Watson and Ian McKellen

During World War II, in German-occupied Romania, Nazi soldiers have been sent to garrison a mysterious fortress. But something incomprehensible lurks at the heart of the Keep, and soon the soldiers realize that it was not built to keep something in, but to stop something from getting out.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
The Keep (1983)

The Keep (1983) is based on the 1981 F. Paul Wilson novel of the same name and is easily one of the most underrated horror films of all time. Partly, that’s due to the massive productions problems that arose during filming, and the horrible decision by the studio executives to make unnecessary and damaging cuts to the final release. Despite the film originally being 3.5 hours long, the Paramount version was cut to 96 minutes. Sadly, we’ll probably never get a fully remastered version of the original material, but what we do have remains one of the most atmospheric and twisted dark WWII fairy tales to ever exist.

The House Where Evil Dwells (1982)The House Where Evil Dwells (1982)
The House Where Evil Dwells (1982)
Director Actors
Kevin Connor Edward Albert, Susan George, and Doug McClure

An American family move to a house in Japan, a house haunted by an affair and dark deeds done beneath the sway of lust and vengeance. Now, those demons are coming back to haunt the living.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
The House Where Evil Dwells (1982)

The House Where Evil Dwells (1982) offers a wild mix of blood, terror, and eroticism — all hallmarks of the horror genre — and weaves them into a clever ghost fable that never got the love it deserved.

My Bloody Valentine (1981)My Bloody Valentine (1981)
My Bloody Valentine (1981)
Director Actors
George Mihalka Paul Kelman, Lori Hallier, and Neil Affleck

Twenty years ago, mine supervisors abandoned their posts and let five miners die. Since then, no Valentine’s Day party has been held… until now. A group of teens sets out to enjoy the spark of a Valentine’s Day dance, only to find a wrathful figure stalking their every move.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
My Bloody Valentine (1981)

My Bloody Valentine (1981) is Quentin Tarantino’s favorite slasher film, which I’m not sure is a recommendation for or against. There is definitely something a little different about it, though; it’s more restrained in some ways, more violent in others, and it offers exactly what you paid for whilst still managing to offer you the bleakest slasher experience around.

The age of NetflixThe age of Netflix
The age of Netflix

Once upon a time, Netflix’s DVD library hosted well over 100,000 titles and sent out roughly 12 million DVDs per week. Now, with the advent of easy-to-use streaming services, the amount of content viewers have available has shrunk to the low thousands. Look up any list of “films to watch” and you’ll find a tiny selection of movies, usually curated by people all reading the same lists and commenting on the exact same hot new show or film.

But, is that all there is? With over a hundred years of incredible filmmaking on the planet, isn’t there something missed when we only pay attention to the latest and greatest? This series is dedicated to answering that question and to exploring a small handful of the unsung films from decades past. I’ll examine each decade in turn, all the way back to the earliest days of film, and I’ll be exploring every genre of film there is! From science fiction, to drama, to romance, to comedy—I’m going to cover the entirety of film history for you, bringing out the golden nuggets for you to enjoy.

As always, with these articles, I love hearing your feedback in the comments section, or on Twitter @indubitablyodin. Let me know what your favorite films of the decade were, which ones you think I should have included, and which you hope I’ll mention in one of my next decades!

How many did you believe?
BrittBritt Britt (137)
Dec 9, 2021
0

Over the centuries, many words, phrases, and proverbs have become famous and used widely all over the world.

The 17 Most Underrated Horror Films of the 1980s

These 1980s horror films that will make you quake, shake, and beg for more.
OdinOdin Odin (147)
Jan 20, 2022
0

The 1980s offered the world a different type of horror than had been seen before, or since. A perfect slurry of technological advancements, to political climates, to shifting cultural landscapes offered the horror genre fertile ground in which to sow its malevolent seed… and sow it did, with abandon, churning out some of the greatest classic franchises of all time and offering up a world of nightmares for audiences around the globe.

Just as the original birth of horror films arose out of the real-world horror birthed in the trenches of World War I, 1980s horror matured within a stark landscape. There was the paranoid politics of the neoliberal capitalist craze, the culmination of many decades of Cold War and the threat of nuclear annihilation, the rise of rampant consumerism and new technologies, and the rise of the AIDS epidemic that would go on to claim over half a million lives and impact countless more. These all fueled a weariness and subconscious darkness that still lurks in the Western world today.

That sort of psychological pressure needs a release valve, a way for people to externalize and understand what is occurring, and the horror genre provides a ready-made set of symbols from which to build this reflective map of our collective psyche. Everything from They Live (1988), to _Windows (1980) offer a view into the crisis of the time.

Some horror, Windows in particular, strike at a different chord: a surge of repressiveness aimed at the LGBTQ+ community (though not always with that intention). Indeed, a reaction against earlier counterculture movements can be seen sharply in many of these films, with conservative values oddly standing in the blood-runneled background. But there were surges against this as well, moments of breakthrough that took jabs at the status quo and the deliverers of a new brutal economic and social order.

Within all of this, a great sense of style also emerged, building on the latest technology to form reality from the unimaginable; to take formless fear and give it form, provide it shape within the prosthetics, lighting, and molded plastics of the age. This great aesthetic, cultivated in the horror of the 1980s, remains with us today, and adds to the nostalgia of the era with its over-bright film stock and its synth-rock overtones.

Posted in these interests:
h/history18 guides
Pop CulturePop Culture
h/popculture96 guides
moviesmovies
h/movies26 guides

The 17 Most Underrated Horror Films of the 1980s

The 17 Most Underrated Horror Films of the 1980s
These 1980s horror films that will make you quake, shake, and beg for more.
OdinOdin Odin (147)
Jan 20, 2022
0
Odin
 
Posted in these interests:
h/history18 guides
Pop CulturePop Culture
h/popculture96 guides
moviesmovies
h/movies26 guides
Posted in these interests:
h/history18 guides
Pop CulturePop Culture
h/popculture96 guides
moviesmovies
h/movies26 guides
Pop Culturemovies
 
In these interests
h/history18 guides
Pop CulturePop Culture
h/popculture96 guides
moviesmovies
h/movies26 guides
h/history18 guides
Pop CulturePop Culture
h/popculture96 guides
moviesmovies
h/movies26 guides
Pop Culturemovies
Silver Bullet (1985)Silver Bullet (1985)
Silver Bullet (1985)
Director Actors
Dan Attias Corey Haim, Gary Busey, Everett McGill, Megan Follows, Terry O’Quinn, Lawrence Tierney, Bill Smitrovich, Kent Broadhurst, David Hart, and James Gammon

When a small town is terrorized by a mysterious killer, it’s up to one wheelchair-bound boy to save them from a terror they can’t imagine.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Silver Bullet (1985)

Silver Bullet (1985) is based on a (1983) Stephen King novella (Cycle of the Werewolf), this little gem often gets forgotten in the mix of all the other film adaptations of his work. Since the screenplay is actually written by King, though, you know you’re in for something good.

Silver Bullet (1985)Silver Bullet (1985)
Silver Bullet (1985)
Director Actors
Dan Attias Corey Haim, Gary Busey, Everett McGill, Megan Follows, Terry O’Quinn, Lawrence Tierney, Bill Smitrovich, Kent Broadhurst, David Hart, and James Gammon

When a small town is terrorized by a mysterious killer, it’s up to one wheelchair-bound boy to save them from a terror they can’t imagine.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Silver Bullet (1985)

Silver Bullet (1985) is based on a (1983) Stephen King novella (Cycle of the Werewolf), this little gem often gets forgotten in the mix of all the other film adaptations of his work. Since the screenplay is actually written by King, though, you know you’re in for something good.

Silver Bullet (1985)

Silver Bullet (1985)
Director Actors
Dan Attias Corey Haim, Gary Busey, Everett McGill, Megan Follows, Terry O’Quinn, Lawrence Tierney, Bill Smitrovich, Kent Broadhurst, David Hart, and James Gammon

Watch the video:

Watch the video:

IMAGE
Far From Home (1989)Far From Home (1989)
Far From Home (1989)
Director Actors
Meiert Avis Drew Barrymore, Matt Frewer, Richard Masur, and Jennifer Tilly

A teenage girl finds herself the center of attention, but of the two boys in her life, one just might be a killer.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Far From Home (1989)

Far From Home (1989) was a massive hit not only because 13-year-old Barrymore is incredible in the spotlight, but because the whole film is snappy, dark, and clever.

Far From Home (1989)Far From Home (1989)
Far From Home (1989)
Director Actors
Meiert Avis Drew Barrymore, Matt Frewer, Richard Masur, and Jennifer Tilly

A teenage girl finds herself the center of attention, but of the two boys in her life, one just might be a killer.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Far From Home (1989)

Far From Home (1989) was a massive hit not only because 13-year-old Barrymore is incredible in the spotlight, but because the whole film is snappy, dark, and clever.

Far From Home (1989)

Far From Home (1989)
Director Actors
Meiert Avis Drew Barrymore, Matt Frewer, Richard Masur, and Jennifer Tilly

Watch the video:

Watch the video:

IMAGE
Pumpkinhead (1988)Pumpkinhead (1988)
Pumpkinhead (1988)
Director Actors
Stan Winston Lance Henriksen, Jeff East, John D’Aquino, Joel Hoffman, Brian Bremer

When a teenage prank leads to the death of a young boy, the boy’s father sets out on a path of vengeance, summoning a dark creature from the very pits of Hell.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Pumpkinhead (1988)

Pumpkinhead (1988) is one film that probably a few more mainstream viewers have encountered, but it’s still one that too-frequently flies beneath the radar, considering just how darn cheesy and scary it is.

Pumpkinhead (1988)Pumpkinhead (1988)
Pumpkinhead (1988)
Director Actors
Stan Winston Lance Henriksen, Jeff East, John D’Aquino, Joel Hoffman, Brian Bremer

When a teenage prank leads to the death of a young boy, the boy’s father sets out on a path of vengeance, summoning a dark creature from the very pits of Hell.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Pumpkinhead (1988)

Pumpkinhead (1988) is one film that probably a few more mainstream viewers have encountered, but it’s still one that too-frequently flies beneath the radar, considering just how darn cheesy and scary it is.

Pumpkinhead (1988)

Pumpkinhead (1988)
Director Actors
Stan Winston Lance Henriksen, Jeff East, John D’Aquino, Joel Hoffman, Brian Bremer

Watch the video:

Watch the video:

IMAGE
Bad Taste (1987)Bad Taste (1987)
Bad Taste (1987)
Director Actors
Peter Jackson Terry Potter, Pete O’Herne, Peter Jackson, Mike Minett, Craig Smith

Something is wrong in a small New Zealand town… something alien. But four men with big guns are there to set things right.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Bad Taste (1987)

Bad Taste (1987) begins one of the strangest and wildest directorial careers in history. From this low budget cult-comedy gore-flick, to one of the largest and most expensive film franchises ever made, Peter Jackson’s career is unexplainable and wonderful.

Bad Taste (1987)Bad Taste (1987)
Bad Taste (1987)
Director Actors
Peter Jackson Terry Potter, Pete O’Herne, Peter Jackson, Mike Minett, Craig Smith

Something is wrong in a small New Zealand town… something alien. But four men with big guns are there to set things right.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Bad Taste (1987)

Bad Taste (1987) begins one of the strangest and wildest directorial careers in history. From this low budget cult-comedy gore-flick, to one of the largest and most expensive film franchises ever made, Peter Jackson’s career is unexplainable and wonderful.

Bad Taste (1987)

Bad Taste (1987)
Director Actors
Peter Jackson Terry Potter, Pete O’Herne, Peter Jackson, Mike Minett, Craig Smith

Watch the video:

Watch the video:

IMAGE
Razorback (1984)Razorback (1984)
Razorback (1984)
Director Actors
Russell Mulcahy Gregory Harrison, Arkie Whiteley

A dark creature stalks the Australian outback, terrorizing and devouring all who encounter it.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Razorback (1984)

Razorback (1984) was based on a 1981 novel by Peter Brennan and carries a massive host of monstrous moments, not all to do with the supernatural creature at the story’s heart. After all, human monsters are the worst of all.

Razorback (1984)Razorback (1984)
Razorback (1984)
Director Actors
Russell Mulcahy Gregory Harrison, Arkie Whiteley

A dark creature stalks the Australian outback, terrorizing and devouring all who encounter it.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Razorback (1984)

Razorback (1984) was based on a 1981 novel by Peter Brennan and carries a massive host of monstrous moments, not all to do with the supernatural creature at the story’s heart. After all, human monsters are the worst of all.

Razorback (1984)

Razorback (1984)
Director Actors
Russell Mulcahy Gregory Harrison, Arkie Whiteley

Watch the video:

Watch the video:

IMAGE
Corpse Mania (1981)Corpse Mania (1981)
Corpse Mania (1981)
Director Actors
Chih-Hung Kuei Ni Tien, Jung Wang, Tsui-Ling Yu

A necrophiliac killer is murdering the prostitutes at Madame Lan’s brothel.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Corpse Mania (1981)

Corpse Mania (1981) is an example of some seriously bleak and wickedly gory horror that arose out of the Hong Kong film industry. There’s a certain extremely darkly comic note at play here, but overall, it’s just-plain-messed-up. The atmosphere that this one creates is unforgettable, however.

Corpse Mania (1981)Corpse Mania (1981)
Corpse Mania (1981)
Director Actors
Chih-Hung Kuei Ni Tien, Jung Wang, Tsui-Ling Yu

A necrophiliac killer is murdering the prostitutes at Madame Lan’s brothel.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Corpse Mania (1981)

Corpse Mania (1981) is an example of some seriously bleak and wickedly gory horror that arose out of the Hong Kong film industry. There’s a certain extremely darkly comic note at play here, but overall, it’s just-plain-messed-up. The atmosphere that this one creates is unforgettable, however.

Corpse Mania (1981)

Corpse Mania (1981)
Director Actors
Chih-Hung Kuei Ni Tien, Jung Wang, Tsui-Ling Yu

Watch the video:

Watch the video:

IMAGE
Society (1989)Society (1989)
Society (1989)
Director Actors
Brian Yuzna Billy Warlock, Devin DeVasquez, Evan Richards, and Ben Meyerson

Beverly Hills is built on the back of the poor, but the class divide might be even sharper than anyone knows. For young Billy, one thing is certain: these people aren’t who he thought they were… either that, or he’s losing his mind.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Society (1989)

Society (1989) is prime horror-satire, which is my preferred form of horror by far. Horror tackles real-world subjects incredibly well, and this little gem came at a time of great fracture in the world, when Regan and Thatcher policies were destroying the remaining social safety nets and things were looking bleak under threat of the Cold War. A little like now, actually. Anyway, horror took the angst of that era and distilled it, and in Society the distillation is superb.

Society (1989)Society (1989)
Society (1989)
Director Actors
Brian Yuzna Billy Warlock, Devin DeVasquez, Evan Richards, and Ben Meyerson

Beverly Hills is built on the back of the poor, but the class divide might be even sharper than anyone knows. For young Billy, one thing is certain: these people aren’t who he thought they were… either that, or he’s losing his mind.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Society (1989)

Society (1989) is prime horror-satire, which is my preferred form of horror by far. Horror tackles real-world subjects incredibly well, and this little gem came at a time of great fracture in the world, when Regan and Thatcher policies were destroying the remaining social safety nets and things were looking bleak under threat of the Cold War. A little like now, actually. Anyway, horror took the angst of that era and distilled it, and in Society the distillation is superb.

Society (1989)

Society (1989)
Director Actors
Brian Yuzna Billy Warlock, Devin DeVasquez, Evan Richards, and Ben Meyerson

Watch the video:

Watch the video:

IMAGE
Evil Dead Trap (1988)Evil Dead Trap (1988)
Evil Dead Trap (1988)
Director Actors
Toshiharu Ikeda Miyuki Ono

A TV show host asks her viewers to send in home videos, but one of them sends her a snuff film, apparently shot in a nearby abandoned factory. Her film crew in tow, she sets out to investigate, but the scoop she finds may be more than she bargained for.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Evil Dead Trap (1988)

Evil Dead Trap (1988) (Shiryō no wana in Japan), takes the Giallo genre, slaps it together with bloody slasher surrealism, and packages it all up to go amid an eerie landscape of half-hidden shots and a leering, hidden danger.

Evil Dead Trap (1988)Evil Dead Trap (1988)
Evil Dead Trap (1988)
Director Actors
Toshiharu Ikeda Miyuki Ono

A TV show host asks her viewers to send in home videos, but one of them sends her a snuff film, apparently shot in a nearby abandoned factory. Her film crew in tow, she sets out to investigate, but the scoop she finds may be more than she bargained for.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Evil Dead Trap (1988)

Evil Dead Trap (1988) (Shiryō no wana in Japan), takes the Giallo genre, slaps it together with bloody slasher surrealism, and packages it all up to go amid an eerie landscape of half-hidden shots and a leering, hidden danger.

Evil Dead Trap (1988)

Evil Dead Trap (1988)
Director Actors
Toshiharu Ikeda Miyuki Ono

Watch the video:

Watch the video:

IMAGE
Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983)Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983)
Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983)
Director Actors
Jack Clayton Jason Robards, Jonathan Pryce, Diane Ladd, and Pam Grier

A mysterious train comes to town on the back of an autumnal wind; a mirror-maze whispers to all who enter it of their deepest desires, and two young boys find themselves up against forces beyond their comprehension.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983)

Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983) is based on Ray Bradbury’s novel of the same name and, honestly, … go read the novel first. It’s one of his best, and you’ll get so much more of the original intensity and vibe from that than from this film. That said, if you’ve already read the book, you’ll likely find this early Disney foray into the dark and strange something fascinating.

Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983)Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983)
Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983)
Director Actors
Jack Clayton Jason Robards, Jonathan Pryce, Diane Ladd, and Pam Grier

A mysterious train comes to town on the back of an autumnal wind; a mirror-maze whispers to all who enter it of their deepest desires, and two young boys find themselves up against forces beyond their comprehension.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983)

Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983) is based on Ray Bradbury’s novel of the same name and, honestly, … go read the novel first. It’s one of his best, and you’ll get so much more of the original intensity and vibe from that than from this film. That said, if you’ve already read the book, you’ll likely find this early Disney foray into the dark and strange something fascinating.

Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983)

Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983)
Director Actors
Jack Clayton Jason Robards, Jonathan Pryce, Diane Ladd, and Pam Grier

Watch the video:

Watch the video:

IMAGE
The Caller (1987)The Caller (1987)
The Caller (1987)
Director Actors
Arthur Allan Seidelman Malcolm McDowell, Madolyn Smith Osborne

A young woman and a mysterious man meet at a cabin in the woods. Neither is what they seem, both know the other is lying, but what they want from one another is the greatest unknown.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
The Caller (1987)

The Caller (1987) is delightfully twisted and clever, doing more with two primary actors and a couple of simple locations than most do with blockbuster budgets. Of course, Malcolm McDowell brings his unique shade of unsettling to this piece, but Osborne’s no slouch either, and they play off one another beautifully.

The Caller (1987)The Caller (1987)
The Caller (1987)
Director Actors
Arthur Allan Seidelman Malcolm McDowell, Madolyn Smith Osborne

A young woman and a mysterious man meet at a cabin in the woods. Neither is what they seem, both know the other is lying, but what they want from one another is the greatest unknown.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
The Caller (1987)

The Caller (1987) is delightfully twisted and clever, doing more with two primary actors and a couple of simple locations than most do with blockbuster budgets. Of course, Malcolm McDowell brings his unique shade of unsettling to this piece, but Osborne’s no slouch either, and they play off one another beautifully.

The Caller (1987)

The Caller (1987)
Director Actors
Arthur Allan Seidelman Malcolm McDowell, Madolyn Smith Osborne

Watch the video:

Watch the video:

IMAGE
The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)​The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)​
The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)​
Director Actors
Amy Holden Jones Michelle Michaels, Robin Stille, and Michael Villella

A high school senior and her friends are having a slumber party, but someone’s planning on party crashing and giving the girls the last time of their life.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)​

The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)​ could have been one of the great early satirical horror films, if not for the lousy infestation of the studio producers who got in the way. They forced the satirical script to be shot like a standard slasher, cutting out the heart of what made the writing so great. Written by Rita Mae Brown, and directed by Amy Jones, this female-led production was a break in the patriarchal norm of that era’s horror films, and even though the producers messed things up, the wittiness of the original script shines through.

The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)​The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)​
The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)​
Director Actors
Amy Holden Jones Michelle Michaels, Robin Stille, and Michael Villella

A high school senior and her friends are having a slumber party, but someone’s planning on party crashing and giving the girls the last time of their life.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)​

The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)​ could have been one of the great early satirical horror films, if not for the lousy infestation of the studio producers who got in the way. They forced the satirical script to be shot like a standard slasher, cutting out the heart of what made the writing so great. Written by Rita Mae Brown, and directed by Amy Jones, this female-led production was a break in the patriarchal norm of that era’s horror films, and even though the producers messed things up, the wittiness of the original script shines through.

The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)​

The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)​
Director Actors
Amy Holden Jones Michelle Michaels, Robin Stille, and Michael Villella

Watch the video:

Watch the video:

IMAGE
The Outing (1987)The Outing (1987)
The Outing (1987)
Director Actors
Tom Daley Deborah Winters, James Huston, Andra St. Ivanyi, Scott Bankston, and Red Mitchell

An ancient evil is released from a magical lamp, and the malevolent creature stalks a group of teenagers through the dark halls of a museum of natural history.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
The Outing (1987)

The Outing (1987) was originally released as The Lamp in the United Kingdom, but received a new name and two minutes of weird cuts for the U.S. version. The film is basically 100% cheese, with enough titillation and ridiculous horror to satisfy anyone who needs a laugh and a few chills. It’s not the greatest film of all time, but it’s a perfect Grade-C horror film.

The Outing (1987)The Outing (1987)
The Outing (1987)
Director Actors
Tom Daley Deborah Winters, James Huston, Andra St. Ivanyi, Scott Bankston, and Red Mitchell

An ancient evil is released from a magical lamp, and the malevolent creature stalks a group of teenagers through the dark halls of a museum of natural history.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
The Outing (1987)

The Outing (1987) was originally released as The Lamp in the United Kingdom, but received a new name and two minutes of weird cuts for the U.S. version. The film is basically 100% cheese, with enough titillation and ridiculous horror to satisfy anyone who needs a laugh and a few chills. It’s not the greatest film of all time, but it’s a perfect Grade-C horror film.

The Outing (1987)

The Outing (1987)
Director Actors
Tom Daley Deborah Winters, James Huston, Andra St. Ivanyi, Scott Bankston, and Red Mitchell

Watch the video:

Watch the video:

IMAGE
Mr. Wrong (1984)Mr. Wrong (1984)
Mr. Wrong (1984)
Director Actors
Gaylene Preston Heather Bolton, David Letch

When a woman moves from her rural home to the big city, she purchases a new car, but quickly finds that her new ride harbors a dark secret.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Mr. Wrong (1984)

Mr. Wrong (1984) is whimsical, atmospheric, and honestly superb. It’s one of those little gems that doesn’t require a big budget to do something superb.

Mr. Wrong (1984)Mr. Wrong (1984)
Mr. Wrong (1984)
Director Actors
Gaylene Preston Heather Bolton, David Letch

When a woman moves from her rural home to the big city, she purchases a new car, but quickly finds that her new ride harbors a dark secret.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Mr. Wrong (1984)

Mr. Wrong (1984) is whimsical, atmospheric, and honestly superb. It’s one of those little gems that doesn’t require a big budget to do something superb.

Mr. Wrong (1984)

Mr. Wrong (1984)
Director Actors
Gaylene Preston Heather Bolton, David Letch

Watch the video:

Watch the video:

IMAGE
Windows (1980)Windows (1980)
Windows (1980)
Director Actors
Gordon Willis Talia Shire, Joseph Cortese, and Elizabeth Ashley

A woman is attacked by a man and fears for her life, but an even more alarming discovery awaits right around the corner.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Windows (1980)

Windows (1980) is an admittedly bad film, so “underrated” hardly fits in the broadest sense. The fact that this film is basically a collection of outmoded and icky lesbian stereotypes, thrown together by a lackluster plot, means that its critics are spot-on. However, Gordon Willis was the director, and his eye is everywhere in the cinematography of this film. Added to that are some solid performances by the lead actors. This one might be underrated more in the sense of if you’re a film student, it’s worth watching, but that still bears repeating.

Windows (1980)Windows (1980)
Windows (1980)
Director Actors
Gordon Willis Talia Shire, Joseph Cortese, and Elizabeth Ashley

A woman is attacked by a man and fears for her life, but an even more alarming discovery awaits right around the corner.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
Windows (1980)

Windows (1980) is an admittedly bad film, so “underrated” hardly fits in the broadest sense. The fact that this film is basically a collection of outmoded and icky lesbian stereotypes, thrown together by a lackluster plot, means that its critics are spot-on. However, Gordon Willis was the director, and his eye is everywhere in the cinematography of this film. Added to that are some solid performances by the lead actors. This one might be underrated more in the sense of if you’re a film student, it’s worth watching, but that still bears repeating.

Windows (1980)

Windows (1980)
Director Actors
Gordon Willis Talia Shire, Joseph Cortese, and Elizabeth Ashley

Watch the video:

Watch the video:

IMAGE
The Keep (1983)The Keep (1983)
The Keep (1983)
Director Actors
Michael Mann Scott Glenn, Gabriel Byrne, Jürgen Prochnow, Alberta Watson and Ian McKellen

During World War II, in German-occupied Romania, Nazi soldiers have been sent to garrison a mysterious fortress. But something incomprehensible lurks at the heart of the Keep, and soon the soldiers realize that it was not built to keep something in, but to stop something from getting out.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
The Keep (1983)

The Keep (1983) is based on the 1981 F. Paul Wilson novel of the same name and is easily one of the most underrated horror films of all time. Partly, that’s due to the massive productions problems that arose during filming, and the horrible decision by the studio executives to make unnecessary and damaging cuts to the final release. Despite the film originally being 3.5 hours long, the Paramount version was cut to 96 minutes. Sadly, we’ll probably never get a fully remastered version of the original material, but what we do have remains one of the most atmospheric and twisted dark WWII fairy tales to ever exist.

The Keep (1983)The Keep (1983)
The Keep (1983)
Director Actors
Michael Mann Scott Glenn, Gabriel Byrne, Jürgen Prochnow, Alberta Watson and Ian McKellen

During World War II, in German-occupied Romania, Nazi soldiers have been sent to garrison a mysterious fortress. But something incomprehensible lurks at the heart of the Keep, and soon the soldiers realize that it was not built to keep something in, but to stop something from getting out.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
The Keep (1983)

The Keep (1983) is based on the 1981 F. Paul Wilson novel of the same name and is easily one of the most underrated horror films of all time. Partly, that’s due to the massive productions problems that arose during filming, and the horrible decision by the studio executives to make unnecessary and damaging cuts to the final release. Despite the film originally being 3.5 hours long, the Paramount version was cut to 96 minutes. Sadly, we’ll probably never get a fully remastered version of the original material, but what we do have remains one of the most atmospheric and twisted dark WWII fairy tales to ever exist.

The Keep (1983)

The Keep (1983)
Director Actors
Michael Mann Scott Glenn, Gabriel Byrne, Jürgen Prochnow, Alberta Watson and Ian McKellen

Watch the video:

Watch the video:

IMAGE
The House Where Evil Dwells (1982)The House Where Evil Dwells (1982)
The House Where Evil Dwells (1982)
Director Actors
Kevin Connor Edward Albert, Susan George, and Doug McClure

An American family move to a house in Japan, a house haunted by an affair and dark deeds done beneath the sway of lust and vengeance. Now, those demons are coming back to haunt the living.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
The House Where Evil Dwells (1982)

The House Where Evil Dwells (1982) offers a wild mix of blood, terror, and eroticism — all hallmarks of the horror genre — and weaves them into a clever ghost fable that never got the love it deserved.

The House Where Evil Dwells (1982)The House Where Evil Dwells (1982)
The House Where Evil Dwells (1982)
Director Actors
Kevin Connor Edward Albert, Susan George, and Doug McClure

An American family move to a house in Japan, a house haunted by an affair and dark deeds done beneath the sway of lust and vengeance. Now, those demons are coming back to haunt the living.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
The House Where Evil Dwells (1982)

The House Where Evil Dwells (1982) offers a wild mix of blood, terror, and eroticism — all hallmarks of the horror genre — and weaves them into a clever ghost fable that never got the love it deserved.

The House Where Evil Dwells (1982)

The House Where Evil Dwells (1982)
Director Actors
Kevin Connor Edward Albert, Susan George, and Doug McClure

Watch the video:

Watch the video:

IMAGE
My Bloody Valentine (1981)My Bloody Valentine (1981)
My Bloody Valentine (1981)
Director Actors
George Mihalka Paul Kelman, Lori Hallier, and Neil Affleck

Twenty years ago, mine supervisors abandoned their posts and let five miners die. Since then, no Valentine’s Day party has been held… until now. A group of teens sets out to enjoy the spark of a Valentine’s Day dance, only to find a wrathful figure stalking their every move.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
My Bloody Valentine (1981)

My Bloody Valentine (1981) is Quentin Tarantino’s favorite slasher film, which I’m not sure is a recommendation for or against. There is definitely something a little different about it, though; it’s more restrained in some ways, more violent in others, and it offers exactly what you paid for whilst still managing to offer you the bleakest slasher experience around.

My Bloody Valentine (1981)My Bloody Valentine (1981)
My Bloody Valentine (1981)
Director Actors
George Mihalka Paul Kelman, Lori Hallier, and Neil Affleck

Twenty years ago, mine supervisors abandoned their posts and let five miners die. Since then, no Valentine’s Day party has been held… until now. A group of teens sets out to enjoy the spark of a Valentine’s Day dance, only to find a wrathful figure stalking their every move.

Watch the video:

Below the surface

IMAGEIMAGE
My Bloody Valentine (1981)

My Bloody Valentine (1981) is Quentin Tarantino’s favorite slasher film, which I’m not sure is a recommendation for or against. There is definitely something a little different about it, though; it’s more restrained in some ways, more violent in others, and it offers exactly what you paid for whilst still managing to offer you the bleakest slasher experience around.

My Bloody Valentine (1981)

My Bloody Valentine (1981)
Director Actors
George Mihalka Paul Kelman, Lori Hallier, and Neil Affleck

Watch the video:

Watch the video:

IMAGE
The age of NetflixThe age of Netflix
The age of Netflix

Once upon a time, Netflix’s DVD library hosted well over 100,000 titles and sent out roughly 12 million DVDs per week. Now, with the advent of easy-to-use streaming services, the amount of content viewers have available has shrunk to the low thousands. Look up any list of “films to watch” and you’ll find a tiny selection of movies, usually curated by people all reading the same lists and commenting on the exact same hot new show or film.

But, is that all there is? With over a hundred years of incredible filmmaking on the planet, isn’t there something missed when we only pay attention to the latest and greatest? This series is dedicated to answering that question and to exploring a small handful of the unsung films from decades past. I’ll examine each decade in turn, all the way back to the earliest days of film, and I’ll be exploring every genre of film there is! From science fiction, to drama, to romance, to comedy—I’m going to cover the entirety of film history for you, bringing out the golden nuggets for you to enjoy.

As always, with these articles, I love hearing your feedback in the comments section, or on Twitter @indubitablyodin. Let me know what your favorite films of the decade were, which ones you think I should have included, and which you hope I’ll mention in one of my next decades!

The age of NetflixThe age of Netflix
The age of Netflix

Once upon a time, Netflix’s DVD library hosted well over 100,000 titles and sent out roughly 12 million DVDs per week. Now, with the advent of easy-to-use streaming services, the amount of content viewers have available has shrunk to the low thousands. Look up any list of “films to watch” and you’ll find a tiny selection of movies, usually curated by people all reading the same lists and commenting on the exact same hot new show or film.

But, is that all there is? With over a hundred years of incredible filmmaking on the planet, isn’t there something missed when we only pay attention to the latest and greatest? This series is dedicated to answering that question and to exploring a small handful of the unsung films from decades past. I’ll examine each decade in turn, all the way back to the earliest days of film, and I’ll be exploring every genre of film there is! From science fiction, to drama, to romance, to comedy—I’m going to cover the entirety of film history for you, bringing out the golden nuggets for you to enjoy.

As always, with these articles, I love hearing your feedback in the comments section, or on Twitter @indubitablyodin. Let me know what your favorite films of the decade were, which ones you think I should have included, and which you hope I’ll mention in one of my next decades!

The age of Netflix

The age of Netflix
How many did you believe?
BrittBritt Britt (137)
Dec 9, 2021
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Over the centuries, many words, phrases, and proverbs have become famous and used widely all over the world.

How many did you believe?
BrittBritt Britt (137)
Dec 9, 2021
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Over the centuries, many words, phrases, and proverbs have become famous and used widely all over the world.

NEXT UP
40 Famous Quotes the Internet Got Wrong
top 40 misquotes
How many did you believe?
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Dec 9, 2021
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Odin Hartshorn Halvorson is a writer, geek, and hopeful futurist. A graduate from Stonecoast MFA, his work has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize. He is the founder of Round Table Writers, an organization dedicated to “writers helping writers.” Odin’s love of Roddenberrian and Straczynskian ideals leads him to contemplate technology’s role in our evolving philosophic landscape, a line of inquiry threaded through both his fiction and non-fiction writing. Learn more at OdinHalvorson.com
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How to Monitor Images in Messenger Kids

JamieJamie Jamie (33)
Jan 7, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone. With Messenger Kids, parents can control their child’s online experience through a variety of functions that allow them to have a safe and secure online experience.

One of the features that allows your child to have a safe experience is monitoring photos your child sends and receives. Parents and guardians can do this from the Parent Dashboard to review every photo sent from and received by your child’s Messenger Kids account.

  1. Go to the Facebook app and click on the three horizontal lines in the bottom right.
  2. Select ‘Messenger Kids
  3. Click your child’s photo.
  4. Click ‘Activity.’
  5. You’ll see the images under ‘Images‘ in ‘Chats

If you’ve found an inappropriate image that you want to remove: 1. Click the image 2. Click the icon in the top right corner 3. Click ‘Remove Image

If you feel it is necessary, you can also block that contact in Messenger Kids so they cannot communicate with your child anymore.

How to Monitor Images in Messenger Kids

JamieJamie Jamie (33)
Jan 7, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone. With Messenger Kids, parents can control their child’s online experience through a variety of functions that allow them to have a safe and secure online experience.

One of the features that allows your child to have a safe experience is monitoring photos your child sends and receives. Parents and guardians can do this from the Parent Dashboard to review every photo sent from and received by your child’s Messenger Kids account.

  1. Go to the Facebook app and click on the three horizontal lines in the bottom right.
  2. Select ‘Messenger Kids
  3. Click your child’s photo.
  4. Click ‘Activity.’
  5. You’ll see the images under ‘Images‘ in ‘Chats

If you’ve found an inappropriate image that you want to remove: 1. Click the image 2. Click the icon in the top right corner 3. Click ‘Remove Image

If you feel it is necessary, you can also block that contact in Messenger Kids so they cannot communicate with your child anymore.

 

How to Monitor Images in Messenger Kids

JamieJamie Jamie (33)
Jan 7, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone. With Messenger Kids, parents can control their child’s online experience through a variety of functions that allow them to have a safe and secure online experience.

One of the features that allows your child to have a safe experience is monitoring photos your child sends and receives. Parents and guardians can do this from the Parent Dashboard to review every photo sent from and received by your child’s Messenger Kids account.

  1. Go to the Facebook app and click on the three horizontal lines in the bottom right.
  2. Select ‘Messenger Kids
  3. Click your child’s photo.
  4. Click ‘Activity.’
  5. You’ll see the images under ‘Images‘ in ‘Chats

If you’ve found an inappropriate image that you want to remove: 1. Click the image 2. Click the icon in the top right corner 3. Click ‘Remove Image

If you feel it is necessary, you can also block that contact in Messenger Kids so they cannot communicate with your child anymore.

How to Monitor Images in Messenger Kids

JamieJamie Jamie (33)
Jan 7, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone. With Messenger Kids, parents can control their child’s online experience through a variety of functions that allow them to have a safe and secure online experience.

One of the features that allows your child to have a safe experience is monitoring photos your child sends and receives. Parents and guardians can do this from the Parent Dashboard to review every photo sent from and received by your child’s Messenger Kids account.

How to Monitor Images in Messenger Kids

monitor images messenger kids
JamieJamie Jamie (33)
Jan 7, 2022
0
Jamie
 
 
  1. Go to the Facebook app and click on the three horizontal lines in the bottom right.
  2. Select ‘Messenger Kids
  3. Click your child’s photo.
  4. Click ‘Activity.’
  5. You’ll see the images under ‘Images‘ in ‘Chats
  1. Go to the Facebook app and click on the three horizontal lines in the bottom right.
  2. Select ‘Messenger Kids
  3. Click your child’s photo.
  4. Click ‘Activity.’
  5. You’ll see the images under ‘Images‘ in ‘Chats

How to Review Images Your Child Sends and Receives

If you’ve found an inappropriate image that you want to remove: 1. Click the image 2. Click the icon in the top right corner 3. Click ‘Remove Image

If you feel it is necessary, you can also block that contact in Messenger Kids so they cannot communicate with your child anymore.

If you’ve found an inappropriate image that you want to remove: 1. Click the image 2. Click the icon in the top right corner 3. Click ‘Remove Image

If you feel it is necessary, you can also block that contact in Messenger Kids so they cannot communicate with your child anymore.

How to Remove an Image in Messenger Kids

Share this guide!
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Jamie's profile pictureJamie's profile pictureJamie
Joined in 2021 33 guides
Managing Editor of Howchoo
Discuss this guide!

How to Connect Your Child’s Messenger Kids account to a Classroom, Team, or Group

JamieJamie Jamie (33)
Jan 7, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone. With Messenger Kids, parents can control their child’s online experience through a variety of functions that allow them to have a safe and secure online experience.

Part of that online experience through Messenger Kids can include being a part of a classroom or a team. The groups feature in Messenger Kids allows kids to connect with classmates, teammates, and friends in a safe and secure way online.

This guide will show you how to add your child’s Messenger Kids account to a group.

In order for your child to connect with a group or class, parents and guardians can approve a teacher or adult to connect their child with other children through Messenger Kids. An important aspect of this feature is that the approved adult can only connect your child with other children whose parents have also approved this adult to connect their child.

This approved adult will be added as a contact in your child’s Messenger Kids, and will be able to add your child to group conversations with other kids, even if they are not in your child’s contacts. That being said, you can feel safe knowing that every child in that group had to approve the adult just like you did.

Once in the group, all members of the group will be automatically added as contacts in your child’s contact list and will also be able to chat individually. If you have concerns about a contact, parents and guardians will still be able to manage these contacts in the Parent Dashboard.

  1. You will receive a generated link from the adult seeking to add your child to a group.
  2. Click the shared link.
  3. Select ‘Allow.’
  4. Select your child’s name.
  5. Using the dropdown arrow, you can set a duration of time for your child to be allowed in the group. Once the duration has ended, the adult will no longer be able to add your child to groups or add contacts to your child’s contact list.
  6. Select ‘Next.’

How to Connect Your Child’s Messenger Kids account to a Classroom, Team, or Group

JamieJamie Jamie (33)
Jan 7, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone. With Messenger Kids, parents can control their child’s online experience through a variety of functions that allow them to have a safe and secure online experience.

Part of that online experience through Messenger Kids can include being a part of a classroom or a team. The groups feature in Messenger Kids allows kids to connect with classmates, teammates, and friends in a safe and secure way online.

This guide will show you how to add your child’s Messenger Kids account to a group.

In order for your child to connect with a group or class, parents and guardians can approve a teacher or adult to connect their child with other children through Messenger Kids. An important aspect of this feature is that the approved adult can only connect your child with other children whose parents have also approved this adult to connect their child.

This approved adult will be added as a contact in your child’s Messenger Kids, and will be able to add your child to group conversations with other kids, even if they are not in your child’s contacts. That being said, you can feel safe knowing that every child in that group had to approve the adult just like you did.

Once in the group, all members of the group will be automatically added as contacts in your child’s contact list and will also be able to chat individually. If you have concerns about a contact, parents and guardians will still be able to manage these contacts in the Parent Dashboard.

  1. You will receive a generated link from the adult seeking to add your child to a group.
  2. Click the shared link.
  3. Select ‘Allow.’
  4. Select your child’s name.
  5. Using the dropdown arrow, you can set a duration of time for your child to be allowed in the group. Once the duration has ended, the adult will no longer be able to add your child to groups or add contacts to your child’s contact list.
  6. Select ‘Next.’
 

How to Connect Your Child’s Messenger Kids account to a Classroom, Team, or Group

JamieJamie Jamie (33)
Jan 7, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone. With Messenger Kids, parents can control their child’s online experience through a variety of functions that allow them to have a safe and secure online experience.

Part of that online experience through Messenger Kids can include being a part of a classroom or a team. The groups feature in Messenger Kids allows kids to connect with classmates, teammates, and friends in a safe and secure way online.

This guide will show you how to add your child’s Messenger Kids account to a group.

In order for your child to connect with a group or class, parents and guardians can approve a teacher or adult to connect their child with other children through Messenger Kids. An important aspect of this feature is that the approved adult can only connect your child with other children whose parents have also approved this adult to connect their child.

This approved adult will be added as a contact in your child’s Messenger Kids, and will be able to add your child to group conversations with other kids, even if they are not in your child’s contacts. That being said, you can feel safe knowing that every child in that group had to approve the adult just like you did.

Once in the group, all members of the group will be automatically added as contacts in your child’s contact list and will also be able to chat individually. If you have concerns about a contact, parents and guardians will still be able to manage these contacts in the Parent Dashboard.

  1. You will receive a generated link from the adult seeking to add your child to a group.
  2. Click the shared link.
  3. Select ‘Allow.’
  4. Select your child’s name.
  5. Using the dropdown arrow, you can set a duration of time for your child to be allowed in the group. Once the duration has ended, the adult will no longer be able to add your child to groups or add contacts to your child’s contact list.
  6. Select ‘Next.’

How to Connect Your Child’s Messenger Kids account to a Classroom, Team, or Group

JamieJamie Jamie (33)
Jan 7, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone. With Messenger Kids, parents can control their child’s online experience through a variety of functions that allow them to have a safe and secure online experience.

Part of that online experience through Messenger Kids can include being a part of a classroom or a team. The groups feature in Messenger Kids allows kids to connect with classmates, teammates, and friends in a safe and secure way online.

This guide will show you how to add your child’s Messenger Kids account to a group.

How to Connect Your Child’s Messenger Kids account to a Classroom, Team, or Group

messenger kids team
JamieJamie Jamie (33)
Jan 7, 2022
0
Jamie
 
 

In order for your child to connect with a group or class, parents and guardians can approve a teacher or adult to connect their child with other children through Messenger Kids. An important aspect of this feature is that the approved adult can only connect your child with other children whose parents have also approved this adult to connect their child.

This approved adult will be added as a contact in your child’s Messenger Kids, and will be able to add your child to group conversations with other kids, even if they are not in your child’s contacts. That being said, you can feel safe knowing that every child in that group had to approve the adult just like you did.

Once in the group, all members of the group will be automatically added as contacts in your child’s contact list and will also be able to chat individually. If you have concerns about a contact, parents and guardians will still be able to manage these contacts in the Parent Dashboard.

In order for your child to connect with a group or class, parents and guardians can approve a teacher or adult to connect their child with other children through Messenger Kids. An important aspect of this feature is that the approved adult can only connect your child with other children whose parents have also approved this adult to connect their child.

This approved adult will be added as a contact in your child’s Messenger Kids, and will be able to add your child to group conversations with other kids, even if they are not in your child’s contacts. That being said, you can feel safe knowing that every child in that group had to approve the adult just like you did.

Once in the group, all members of the group will be automatically added as contacts in your child’s contact list and will also be able to chat individually. If you have concerns about a contact, parents and guardians will still be able to manage these contacts in the Parent Dashboard.

Approved Adults

  1. You will receive a generated link from the adult seeking to add your child to a group.
  2. Click the shared link.
  3. Select ‘Allow.’
  4. Select your child’s name.
  5. Using the dropdown arrow, you can set a duration of time for your child to be allowed in the group. Once the duration has ended, the adult will no longer be able to add your child to groups or add contacts to your child’s contact list.
  6. Select ‘Next.’
  1. You will receive a generated link from the adult seeking to add your child to a group.
  2. Click the shared link.
  3. Select ‘Allow.’
  4. Select your child’s name.
  5. Using the dropdown arrow, you can set a duration of time for your child to be allowed in the group. Once the duration has ended, the adult will no longer be able to add your child to groups or add contacts to your child’s contact list.
  6. Select ‘Next.’

Approving a request from an approved adult

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Joined in 2021 33 guides
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Free Game! Gods Will Fall on Epic Games Store

Gods Will Fall is free January 6th to 13th, 2022!
OdinOdin Odin (92)
Jan 6, 2022
0

Each week, check out my latest article for the new hit game or add-on released for free from the Epic Games Store! This time, it’s Gods Will Fall, a rougelike game experience full of Celtic warriors, gruesome and terrifying supernatural monsters, and an epic quest to strike back at humanity’s cruel oppressors.

This is a game well worth full price, so getting it for free is one of the most exciting Epic deals in a long time.

Gods Will FallGods Will Fall
Gods Will Fall

The gods’ torturous rule over humanity has lasted for millennia. Bent on cruelty and suffering, they demand to be served with blind worship through an oath of fealty pledged from every man, woman and child. To those who don’t submit to the gods’ will; a slow and merciless death awaits.

Watch the video:

Takes some of the best rougelike elements we’ve seen popularized by games in recent years, and builds upon them, working to undermine those elements that are frustrating whilst advancing those that provoke a real sense of urgency, danger, and loss.

After your rebellious invasion force of many thousands is struck by a god-flung storm at sea, your eight surviving Celtic heroes are the only chance you have to slash and hack your way through the gods’ monstrous minions… so you can eventually face the gods themselves. These heroes are randomized at the start of the game, as are other elements of the boss battles and dungeons, meaning that there’s always a fresh feeling to this one.

Unlike some games that feature randomization, Gods Will Fall doesn’t let things feel like an arbitrary blank slate. You’re going to get attached to your little warriors, and sometimes you’re going to find yourself unexpectedly rooting for the one you thought was your least favorite earlier on.

Clever Beans and other gamesClever Beans and other games
Clever Beans and other games

Clever Beans does not have many large games under their belt. So-far, they only have two, and neither is anywhere near the scope and scale of Gods Will Fall. They obviously have a lot of creativity and passion in their studio, however, so it will be exciting to see what they turn up with next.

If you want something similar to Gods Will Fall, I recommend trying out Dreamscaper (2020) by Guerrilla Collective. Which features a very similar top-down style, beautiful graphics, and a cool story.

Watch the video:

What is the Epic Games Store?What is the Epic Games Store?
What is the Epic Games Store?

The Epic Games Store has been around for a while, the lesser-known alternative to Steam, the nearly-ubiquitous platform for game purchases since it launched in 2003. But, where Steam originally existed and launched to promote Valve games, Epic Games Store launched in 2018 and quickly rose to success on the Fortnight franchise. At the time of Epic’s launch, Steam took a dramatic 30% cut from the sales of video games through their platform! This hurt both game designers and users, just wasn’t very nice. But the folks behind Epic realized something excellent: they could take a much lower cut and still have a profitable business. This led them to fast domination of the indie market, as small publishers flocked to the far better terms offered by Epic.

Mega Discounts

Epic Games Store LogoEpic Games Store Logo
Epic games Store

Epic Games Store offers some seriously incredible discounts on a regular basis, in addition to all the normal discounts one would expect on Black Friday, Cyber Monday, and the usual holidays. But the most exciting is their weekly free game or add-on, which simply harpoons all competitors.

When I first heard about this free game, I thought that can’t be real. They must only offer tiny indie games. Not at all, dear reader. Not. At. All. Epic frequently lists unbelievable A-lister games on their weekly deal, as well as sometimes offer two free games instead of one. In addition, just because a studio is smaller doesn’t mean the games it makes aren’t impressive. I’ve picked up some of my favorite new games, for free, from this platform, and most of them have been made by smaller studios (or as side-projects for teams from big studios).

Odin's profile pictureOdin's profile pictureOdin
Joined in 2021 92 guides
Odin Hartshorn Halvorson is a writer, geek, and hopeful futurist. A graduate from Stonecoast MFA, his work has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize. He is the founder of Round Table Writers, an organization dedicated to “writers helping writers.” Odin’s love of Roddenberrian and Straczynskian ideals leads him to contemplate technology’s role in our evolving philosophic landscape, a line of inquiry threaded through both his fiction and non-fiction writing. Learn more at OdinHalvorson.com
Discuss this guide!

Free Game! Gods Will Fall on Epic Games Store

Gods Will Fall is free January 6th to 13th, 2022!
OdinOdin Odin (92)
Jan 6, 2022
0

Each week, check out my latest article for the new hit game or add-on released for free from the Epic Games Store! This time, it’s Gods Will Fall, a rougelike game experience full of Celtic warriors, gruesome and terrifying supernatural monsters, and an epic quest to strike back at humanity’s cruel oppressors.

This is a game well worth full price, so getting it for free is one of the most exciting Epic deals in a long time.

Gods Will FallGods Will Fall
Gods Will Fall

The gods’ torturous rule over humanity has lasted for millennia. Bent on cruelty and suffering, they demand to be served with blind worship through an oath of fealty pledged from every man, woman and child. To those who don’t submit to the gods’ will; a slow and merciless death awaits.

Watch the video:

Takes some of the best rougelike elements we’ve seen popularized by games in recent years, and builds upon them, working to undermine those elements that are frustrating whilst advancing those that provoke a real sense of urgency, danger, and loss.

After your rebellious invasion force of many thousands is struck by a god-flung storm at sea, your eight surviving Celtic heroes are the only chance you have to slash and hack your way through the gods’ monstrous minions… so you can eventually face the gods themselves. These heroes are randomized at the start of the game, as are other elements of the boss battles and dungeons, meaning that there’s always a fresh feeling to this one.

Unlike some games that feature randomization, Gods Will Fall doesn’t let things feel like an arbitrary blank slate. You’re going to get attached to your little warriors, and sometimes you’re going to find yourself unexpectedly rooting for the one you thought was your least favorite earlier on.

Clever Beans and other gamesClever Beans and other games
Clever Beans and other games

Clever Beans does not have many large games under their belt. So-far, they only have two, and neither is anywhere near the scope and scale of Gods Will Fall. They obviously have a lot of creativity and passion in their studio, however, so it will be exciting to see what they turn up with next.

If you want something similar to Gods Will Fall, I recommend trying out Dreamscaper (2020) by Guerrilla Collective. Which features a very similar top-down style, beautiful graphics, and a cool story.

Watch the video:

What is the Epic Games Store?What is the Epic Games Store?
What is the Epic Games Store?

The Epic Games Store has been around for a while, the lesser-known alternative to Steam, the nearly-ubiquitous platform for game purchases since it launched in 2003. But, where Steam originally existed and launched to promote Valve games, Epic Games Store launched in 2018 and quickly rose to success on the Fortnight franchise. At the time of Epic’s launch, Steam took a dramatic 30% cut from the sales of video games through their platform! This hurt both game designers and users, just wasn’t very nice. But the folks behind Epic realized something excellent: they could take a much lower cut and still have a profitable business. This led them to fast domination of the indie market, as small publishers flocked to the far better terms offered by Epic.

Mega Discounts

Epic Games Store LogoEpic Games Store Logo
Epic games Store

Epic Games Store offers some seriously incredible discounts on a regular basis, in addition to all the normal discounts one would expect on Black Friday, Cyber Monday, and the usual holidays. But the most exciting is their weekly free game or add-on, which simply harpoons all competitors.

When I first heard about this free game, I thought that can’t be real. They must only offer tiny indie games. Not at all, dear reader. Not. At. All. Epic frequently lists unbelievable A-lister games on their weekly deal, as well as sometimes offer two free games instead of one. In addition, just because a studio is smaller doesn’t mean the games it makes aren’t impressive. I’ve picked up some of my favorite new games, for free, from this platform, and most of them have been made by smaller studios (or as side-projects for teams from big studios).

 

Free Game! Gods Will Fall on Epic Games Store

Gods Will Fall is free January 6th to 13th, 2022!
OdinOdin Odin (92)
Jan 6, 2022
0

Each week, check out my latest article for the new hit game or add-on released for free from the Epic Games Store! This time, it’s Gods Will Fall, a rougelike game experience full of Celtic warriors, gruesome and terrifying supernatural monsters, and an epic quest to strike back at humanity’s cruel oppressors.

This is a game well worth full price, so getting it for free is one of the most exciting Epic deals in a long time.

Gods Will FallGods Will Fall
Gods Will Fall

The gods’ torturous rule over humanity has lasted for millennia. Bent on cruelty and suffering, they demand to be served with blind worship through an oath of fealty pledged from every man, woman and child. To those who don’t submit to the gods’ will; a slow and merciless death awaits.

Watch the video:

Takes some of the best rougelike elements we’ve seen popularized by games in recent years, and builds upon them, working to undermine those elements that are frustrating whilst advancing those that provoke a real sense of urgency, danger, and loss.

After your rebellious invasion force of many thousands is struck by a god-flung storm at sea, your eight surviving Celtic heroes are the only chance you have to slash and hack your way through the gods’ monstrous minions… so you can eventually face the gods themselves. These heroes are randomized at the start of the game, as are other elements of the boss battles and dungeons, meaning that there’s always a fresh feeling to this one.

Unlike some games that feature randomization, Gods Will Fall doesn’t let things feel like an arbitrary blank slate. You’re going to get attached to your little warriors, and sometimes you’re going to find yourself unexpectedly rooting for the one you thought was your least favorite earlier on.

Clever Beans and other gamesClever Beans and other games
Clever Beans and other games

Clever Beans does not have many large games under their belt. So-far, they only have two, and neither is anywhere near the scope and scale of Gods Will Fall. They obviously have a lot of creativity and passion in their studio, however, so it will be exciting to see what they turn up with next.

If you want something similar to Gods Will Fall, I recommend trying out Dreamscaper (2020) by Guerrilla Collective. Which features a very similar top-down style, beautiful graphics, and a cool story.

Watch the video:

What is the Epic Games Store?What is the Epic Games Store?
What is the Epic Games Store?

The Epic Games Store has been around for a while, the lesser-known alternative to Steam, the nearly-ubiquitous platform for game purchases since it launched in 2003. But, where Steam originally existed and launched to promote Valve games, Epic Games Store launched in 2018 and quickly rose to success on the Fortnight franchise. At the time of Epic’s launch, Steam took a dramatic 30% cut from the sales of video games through their platform! This hurt both game designers and users, just wasn’t very nice. But the folks behind Epic realized something excellent: they could take a much lower cut and still have a profitable business. This led them to fast domination of the indie market, as small publishers flocked to the far better terms offered by Epic.

Mega Discounts

Epic Games Store LogoEpic Games Store Logo
Epic games Store

Epic Games Store offers some seriously incredible discounts on a regular basis, in addition to all the normal discounts one would expect on Black Friday, Cyber Monday, and the usual holidays. But the most exciting is their weekly free game or add-on, which simply harpoons all competitors.

When I first heard about this free game, I thought that can’t be real. They must only offer tiny indie games. Not at all, dear reader. Not. At. All. Epic frequently lists unbelievable A-lister games on their weekly deal, as well as sometimes offer two free games instead of one. In addition, just because a studio is smaller doesn’t mean the games it makes aren’t impressive. I’ve picked up some of my favorite new games, for free, from this platform, and most of them have been made by smaller studios (or as side-projects for teams from big studios).

Free Game! Gods Will Fall on Epic Games Store

Gods Will Fall is free January 6th to 13th, 2022!
OdinOdin Odin (92)
Jan 6, 2022
0

Each week, check out my latest article for the new hit game or add-on released for free from the Epic Games Store! This time, it’s Gods Will Fall, a rougelike game experience full of Celtic warriors, gruesome and terrifying supernatural monsters, and an epic quest to strike back at humanity’s cruel oppressors.

This is a game well worth full price, so getting it for free is one of the most exciting Epic deals in a long time.

Free Game! Gods Will Fall on Epic Games Store

Free Game! Gods Will Fall on Epic Games Store
Gods Will Fall is free January 6th to 13th, 2022!
OdinOdin Odin (92)
Jan 6, 2022
0
Odin
 
Table of Contents

Jump to step:

  1. Gods Will Fall
  2. Clever Beans and other games
  3. What is the Epic Games Store?
 
Gods Will FallGods Will Fall
Gods Will Fall

The gods’ torturous rule over humanity has lasted for millennia. Bent on cruelty and suffering, they demand to be served with blind worship through an oath of fealty pledged from every man, woman and child. To those who don’t submit to the gods’ will; a slow and merciless death awaits.

Watch the video:

Takes some of the best rougelike elements we’ve seen popularized by games in recent years, and builds upon them, working to undermine those elements that are frustrating whilst advancing those that provoke a real sense of urgency, danger, and loss.

After your rebellious invasion force of many thousands is struck by a god-flung storm at sea, your eight surviving Celtic heroes are the only chance you have to slash and hack your way through the gods’ monstrous minions… so you can eventually face the gods themselves. These heroes are randomized at the start of the game, as are other elements of the boss battles and dungeons, meaning that there’s always a fresh feeling to this one.

Unlike some games that feature randomization, Gods Will Fall doesn’t let things feel like an arbitrary blank slate. You’re going to get attached to your little warriors, and sometimes you’re going to find yourself unexpectedly rooting for the one you thought was your least favorite earlier on.

Gods Will FallGods Will Fall
Gods Will Fall

The gods’ torturous rule over humanity has lasted for millennia. Bent on cruelty and suffering, they demand to be served with blind worship through an oath of fealty pledged from every man, woman and child. To those who don’t submit to the gods’ will; a slow and merciless death awaits.

Watch the video:

Takes some of the best rougelike elements we’ve seen popularized by games in recent years, and builds upon them, working to undermine those elements that are frustrating whilst advancing those that provoke a real sense of urgency, danger, and loss.

After your rebellious invasion force of many thousands is struck by a god-flung storm at sea, your eight surviving Celtic heroes are the only chance you have to slash and hack your way through the gods’ monstrous minions… so you can eventually face the gods themselves. These heroes are randomized at the start of the game, as are other elements of the boss battles and dungeons, meaning that there’s always a fresh feeling to this one.

Unlike some games that feature randomization, Gods Will Fall doesn’t let things feel like an arbitrary blank slate. You’re going to get attached to your little warriors, and sometimes you’re going to find yourself unexpectedly rooting for the one you thought was your least favorite earlier on.

Gods Will Fall

Gods Will Fall

Watch the video:

Watch the video:

Clever Beans and other gamesClever Beans and other games
Clever Beans and other games

Clever Beans does not have many large games under their belt. So-far, they only have two, and neither is anywhere near the scope and scale of Gods Will Fall. They obviously have a lot of creativity and passion in their studio, however, so it will be exciting to see what they turn up with next.

If you want something similar to Gods Will Fall, I recommend trying out Dreamscaper (2020) by Guerrilla Collective. Which features a very similar top-down style, beautiful graphics, and a cool story.

Watch the video:

Clever Beans and other gamesClever Beans and other games
Clever Beans and other games

Clever Beans does not have many large games under their belt. So-far, they only have two, and neither is anywhere near the scope and scale of Gods Will Fall. They obviously have a lot of creativity and passion in their studio, however, so it will be exciting to see what they turn up with next.

If you want something similar to Gods Will Fall, I recommend trying out Dreamscaper (2020) by Guerrilla Collective. Which features a very similar top-down style, beautiful graphics, and a cool story.

Watch the video:

Clever Beans and other games

Clever Beans and other games

Watch the video:

Watch the video:

What is the Epic Games Store?What is the Epic Games Store?
What is the Epic Games Store?

The Epic Games Store has been around for a while, the lesser-known alternative to Steam, the nearly-ubiquitous platform for game purchases since it launched in 2003. But, where Steam originally existed and launched to promote Valve games, Epic Games Store launched in 2018 and quickly rose to success on the Fortnight franchise. At the time of Epic’s launch, Steam took a dramatic 30% cut from the sales of video games through their platform! This hurt both game designers and users, just wasn’t very nice. But the folks behind Epic realized something excellent: they could take a much lower cut and still have a profitable business. This led them to fast domination of the indie market, as small publishers flocked to the far better terms offered by Epic.

Mega Discounts

Epic Games Store LogoEpic Games Store Logo
Epic games Store

Epic Games Store offers some seriously incredible discounts on a regular basis, in addition to all the normal discounts one would expect on Black Friday, Cyber Monday, and the usual holidays. But the most exciting is their weekly free game or add-on, which simply harpoons all competitors.

When I first heard about this free game, I thought that can’t be real. They must only offer tiny indie games. Not at all, dear reader. Not. At. All. Epic frequently lists unbelievable A-lister games on their weekly deal, as well as sometimes offer two free games instead of one. In addition, just because a studio is smaller doesn’t mean the games it makes aren’t impressive. I’ve picked up some of my favorite new games, for free, from this platform, and most of them have been made by smaller studios (or as side-projects for teams from big studios).

What is the Epic Games Store?What is the Epic Games Store?
What is the Epic Games Store?

The Epic Games Store has been around for a while, the lesser-known alternative to Steam, the nearly-ubiquitous platform for game purchases since it launched in 2003. But, where Steam originally existed and launched to promote Valve games, Epic Games Store launched in 2018 and quickly rose to success on the Fortnight franchise. At the time of Epic’s launch, Steam took a dramatic 30% cut from the sales of video games through their platform! This hurt both game designers and users, just wasn’t very nice. But the folks behind Epic realized something excellent: they could take a much lower cut and still have a profitable business. This led them to fast domination of the indie market, as small publishers flocked to the far better terms offered by Epic.

Mega Discounts

Epic Games Store LogoEpic Games Store Logo
Epic games Store

Epic Games Store offers some seriously incredible discounts on a regular basis, in addition to all the normal discounts one would expect on Black Friday, Cyber Monday, and the usual holidays. But the most exciting is their weekly free game or add-on, which simply harpoons all competitors.

When I first heard about this free game, I thought that can’t be real. They must only offer tiny indie games. Not at all, dear reader. Not. At. All. Epic frequently lists unbelievable A-lister games on their weekly deal, as well as sometimes offer two free games instead of one. In addition, just because a studio is smaller doesn’t mean the games it makes aren’t impressive. I’ve picked up some of my favorite new games, for free, from this platform, and most of them have been made by smaller studios (or as side-projects for teams from big studios).

What is the Epic Games Store?

What is the Epic Games Store?Epic Games Store Logo
Odin's profile pictureOdin's profile pictureOdin
Joined in 2021 92 guides
Odin Hartshorn Halvorson is a writer, geek, and hopeful futurist. A graduate from Stonecoast MFA, his work has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize. He is the founder of Round Table Writers, an organization dedicated to “writers helping writers.” Odin’s love of Roddenberrian and Straczynskian ideals leads him to contemplate technology’s role in our evolving philosophic landscape, a line of inquiry threaded through both his fiction and non-fiction writing. Learn more at OdinHalvorson.com
Discuss this guide!
Share this guide!
RedditEmailTextPinterest
Odin's profile pictureOdin's profile pictureOdin
Joined in 2021 92 guides
Odin Hartshorn Halvorson is a writer, geek, and hopeful futurist. A graduate from Stonecoast MFA, his work has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize. He is the founder of Round Table Writers, an organization dedicated to “writers helping writers.” Odin’s love of Roddenberrian and Straczynskian ideals leads him to contemplate technology’s role in our evolving philosophic landscape, a line of inquiry threaded through both his fiction and non-fiction writing. Learn more at OdinHalvorson.com
Odin's profile picture
Discuss this guide!
Discover interesting things!
Explore Howchoo’s most popular interests.
Explore

Follow @howchoo and learn cool things:

Are you a passionate writer? We’re hiring!

Write for Howchoo

Like what we do?

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Want to support Howchoo? When you buy a tool or material through one of our Amazon links, we earn a small commission as an Amazon Associate.

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Rimworld: The Best Medieval Mods

Turn RimWorld into a medieval paradise with these mods!
OdinOdin Odin (88)
Jan 6, 2022
0

If you’ve yet to play RimWorld, you’re missing out on one of the best 2D gaming experiences of the century. Massively addicting; it’s part building game, part Dwarf Fortress, part Sims. The mods, however, are what make it so fantastic. On its own, the base game is enjoyable, if somewhat limited. But as a platform from which to launch your own unique gaming experience, it really is the best.

The base RimWorld game reads a little like a cross between an Ian M. Banks novel and Firefly. In a vast universe, you are in control of the lives of a number of pawns on a “RimWorld”, a planet far from the core of civilization. All ages of technology coincide on these planets, and the struggle for survival can be harsh as you seek to overcome obstacles like solar storms, plagues, and hoards of man-hunting rabbits.

There are tons of mods you can add to the game for a superb experience, but one of my favorite ways to dig into RimWorld is through the use of mods that alter the theme to a medieval aesthetic. In this way, almost everything in the game can be altered so that you get the immersive feeling of setting up a small medieval community and watching it grow, whilst trying to stay out of the way of the big kingdoms that are duking it out across the map in a titanic feudal power struggle.

Note: the expansions are totally necessary for many of these mods.

Posted in these interests:
h/gaming144 guides
h/modding0 guides
Mod ManagerMod Manager
Mod Manager

Mod Manager isn’t a medieval mod, specifically, but trust me, you’ll want to use it to organize your mods.

Harmony & HugsLibHarmony & HugsLib
Harmony & HugsLib

Harmony is just a library mod that other mods use as a reference to get cool things done. You’re going to need it for many of the mods that you want to use, so just load it up.

You’ll also want to grab HugsLib while you’re at it. Another library mod that’s required for even more mods, this is another no-brainer if you want to have any mods active at all.

Allow ToolAllow Tool
Allow Tool

Allow Tool is a must for any RimWorld playthrough. The base game doesn’t handle some things very well, but Allow Tool opens up a wide dimension of easy control for your little colony.

Beautiful OutdoorsBeautiful Outdoors
Beautiful Outdoors

Beautiful Outdoors is another quality of life mod. Normally, your pawns get really sick of being outside, but this helps change their perceptions of nature — important for an overhaul that has them in the great outdoors a lot!

BlueprintsBlueprints
Blueprints

Blueprints is one of the best mods for helping you build your little colony in a timely fashion, without having to micromanage quite so much. Just set a template room up, copy it, and paste it whenever you need to build the same sort of room again!

BridgelloBridgello
Bridgello

Bridgello is a great mod aesthetically, but it’s also just plain useful, giving you a great way to build all-important bridges across bodies of water.

Camping TentCamping Tent
Camping Tent

Camping Tent just makes sense. Why don’t the pawns in RimWorld ever have an intermediate space between indoor living and being naked in a rainstorm? Tents solve everything, and make a ton of sense for a medieval game.

Caravan AdventuresCaravan Adventures
Caravan Adventures

Caravan Adventures is super cool. Not only does it add some new features to the caravaning process, it also adds a great storyline that perks the whole experience up.

Caravan Mood BuffCaravan Mood Buff
Caravan Mood Buff

Caravan Mood Buff is vital if you actually want to enjoy having your pawns go out on adventures. Without this, they’re ridiculously grumpy all the time.

Character EditorCharacter Editor
Character Editor

Character Editor is totally a quality of life mod, but it’s pretty essential under most circumstances, especially if you want to control the aesthetic flavor of your playthrough.

Common SenseCommon Sense
Common Sense

Common Sense seems like a good idea, right? So many of the pawns’ behavior in the base game comes across as idiotic—only existing for the sake of making the game hard. This solves that, helping pawns actually act intelligently.

Dreamer's DreamsDreamer's Dreams
Dreamer’s Dreams

Dreamer’s Dreams brings dreams and nightmares to your pawns, adding a lot of wonderful depth to their little pawn lives.

Faction CustomizerFaction Customizer
Faction Customizer

Faction Customizer is entirely vital for an aesthetic playthrough as it gives you the ability to micromanage how all the factions appear and function in the game.

Faction ManagerFaction Manager
Faction Manager

Faction Manager makes it possible to really expand and build beyond a single colony. This way, you can freeze one colony and go found another, freeing you from having to micromanage multiple colonies at the same time. This means you can spread your empire across the world!

Fortifications - NeolithicFortifications - Neolithic
Fortifications – Neolithic

Fortifications – Neolithic offers a ton of neolithic fortification options, dramatically broadening your defensive possibilities in a low-tech setting.

Fortifications - MedievalFortifications - Medieval
Fortifications – Medieval

Fortifications – Medieval brings awesome medieval fortifications to the game, allowing you to build the defensive keep or castle of your dreams!

Fortifications - Medieval - MaterialFortifications - Medieval - Material
Fortifications – Medieval – Material

Fortifications – Medieval – Material is the second module in the medieval fortifications series, and it’s great! Adds a bunch of options for early gameplay and more.

Giddy-up!Giddy-up!
Giddy-up!

Giddy-up! is an amazing series of mods that really makes a medieval playthrough possible. After all, what would a medieval game be like if you couldn’t have your knight riding to battle on the back of a horse? There are a few mods in the Giddy-up! Line-up that you’ll want to have, though, so make sure to grab them all.

Go the F*** to SleepGo the F*** to Sleep
Go the F*** to Sleep

Go the F*** to Sleep is a simple mod that ensures you can tell colonists to go to sleep when YOU need them to. Honestly, nothing would get done around here if you didn’t micromanage it.

Guards For MeGuards For Me
Guards For Me

Guards For Me super useful if you want your castle to actually be defended properly. This way, you can have your soldiers patrolling while your other pawns work hard on building your new palace throne room.

Medieval OverhaulMedieval Overhaul
Medieval Overhaul

Medieval Overhaul concentrates on fulfilling all your medieval playthrough dreams, adding tons of clever little features and generally overhauling the experience to one that feels truly medieval.

Medieval Empire OverhaulMedieval Empire Overhaul
Medieval Empire Overhaul

Medieval Empire Overhaul takes the super-advanced “Empire” faction from Royalty and alters it so that it fits the medieval aesthetic. Now you can actually feel like you’re undertaking diplomatic efforts with a powerful kingdom of the dark ages! This requires Medieval Overhaul to run.

MendAndRecycleMendAndRecycle
MendAndRecycle

MendAndRecycle just makes sense, but especially for people in a medieval setting! Not being able to repair things in the base setting always seemed a bit silly, and now this gets rectified!

More Than CapableMore Than Capable
More Than Capable

More Than Capable helps your pawns actually tackle the harsh world around them. Sure, they might not be good at things, but when push comes to shove they just need to get to work! This makes even more sense in a setting that’s supposed to be medieval!

No Random RelationsNo Random Relations
No Random Relations

No Random Relations just helps ensure that random relationship incidents don’t mess up the really fun medieval experience that you’re going for.

RPG Style Inventory RevampedRPG Style Inventory Revamped
RPG Style Inventory Revamped

RPG Style Inventory Revamped turns the management of a pawns gear into something resembling a classic RPG experience, perfect for the medieval D&D vibe!

Realistic Rooms RewrittenRealistic Rooms Rewritten
Realistic Rooms Rewritten

Realistic Rooms Rewritten makes so much sense with any playthrough, but far more sense when you’re setting out to play a medieval run. You can even control the size of the rooms further through the mod menu. Since I always thought the room size requirements for pawn happiness were wonky, this is a must have mod for me.

Rimedieval - Medieval ConversionRimedieval - Medieval Conversion
Rimedieval – Medieval Conversion

Rimedieval – Medieval Conversion is totally brilliant because it patches other mods, and certain aspects of the game (like the end quest) to keep them all in line with a medieval aesthetic. That way you can enjoy your favorite mods without having immersion-breaking additions.

Vanilla Fishing ExpandedVanilla Fishing Expanded
Vanilla Fishing Expanded

Vanilla Fishing Expanded is a necessity to provide additional food sources since some are eliminated by the lack of more advanced tech.

Supersonic's Medieval TweaksSupersonic's Medieval Tweaks
Supersonic’s Medieval Tweaks

Supersonic’s Medieval Tweaks does what it says: it tweaks a bunch of minor content points to help provide a better medieval experience.

Babies and ChildrenBabies and Children
Babies and Children

Babies and Children is essential for a medieval RimWorld playthrough. Now you can have a real dynasty form, and, if you use one of the aging or time-alteration mods, you could even watch entire generations of your little kingdom drift by. Make sure to read the page for this mod, it has instructions for a couple of required mods you’ll need to install alongside.

Medieval MedicinesMedieval Medicines
Medieval Medicines

Medieval Medicines widens the medical possibilities so you’re not stuck up the old crick without a paddle next time infection sets in.

Medieval ProstheticsMedieval Prosthetics
Medieval Prosthetics

Medieval Prosthetics opens a new realm of prosthetic possibility for your wounded pawns, without breaking the medieval flavor!

Entosomnia - Medieval CryptosleepEntosomnia - Medieval Cryptosleep
Entosomnia – Medieval Cryptosleep

Entosomnia – Medieval Cryptosleep . A sarcophagus filled with insect jelly and lined with intricate arcane conduits allows for indefinite suspension of living beings. Medieval cryptosleep replacement.

QuarryQuarry
Quarry

Quarry allows you to collect rocks and resources even if you spawned your kingdom on a map tile without hills and mountains! Pretty important, since stone is going to be your main construction element.

Geothermal CoolersGeothermal Coolers
Geothermal Coolers

Geothermal Coolers makes playing in a medieval setting far more possible. Without a method to cool your food, your have to do some pretty weird workarounds, or resort to installing one of the magic mods that offers cooling crystals. This is a nice middle ground.

Standalone Hot SpringStandalone Hot Spring
Standalone Hot Spring

Standalone Hot Spring allows you to use your hot springs for a whole different purpose: keeping your pawns happy and healthy!

Medieval drug labMedieval drug lab
Medieval drug lab

Medieval drug lab is a tiny patch that makes the drug lab accessible even if another mod has locked it out for being too high a tech level. Important!

Pure Medieval SoundtrackPure Medieval Soundtrack
Pure Medieval Soundtrack

Pure Medieval Soundtrack provides over 40 brand new music tracks by the masterful Alexander Nakrada. These tracks are all original, and all fall under the creative commons 4.0 copyright law.

Medieval Cross-Functionality Patches+Medieval Cross-Functionality Patches+
Medieval Cross-Functionality Patches+

Medieval Cross-Functionality Patches+ offers compatibility for a bunch of medieval mods, and I highly recommend using it!

What are your favorite medieval mods?What are your favorite medieval mods?
What are your favorite medieval mods?

There are so many brilliant mods out there for RimWorld, and it can get pretty overwhelming to install them all, but hopefully this list helps get you started on your next grand adventure.

I know there are probably tons of mods that I’ve missed, so go ahead and let me know in the comments what your favorite medieval mods are for RimWorld. What do you think I should have added?

Get your wishlist ready for these games!
BrittBritt Britt (92)
Dec 27, 2021
0

With so many games released every year, it can be difficult to keep track of them all! The past couple years have made us very familiar with game delays, disappointments, and surprising successes.

Follow @howchoo and learn cool things:

Are you a passionate writer? We’re hiring!

Write for Howchoo

Like what we do?

Donate

Want to support Howchoo? When you buy a tool or material through one of our Amazon links, we earn a small commission as an Amazon Associate.

Rimworld: The Best Medieval Mods

Turn RimWorld into a medieval paradise with these mods!
OdinOdin Odin (88)
Jan 6, 2022
0

If you’ve yet to play RimWorld, you’re missing out on one of the best 2D gaming experiences of the century. Massively addicting; it’s part building game, part Dwarf Fortress, part Sims. The mods, however, are what make it so fantastic. On its own, the base game is enjoyable, if somewhat limited. But as a platform from which to launch your own unique gaming experience, it really is the best.

The base RimWorld game reads a little like a cross between an Ian M. Banks novel and Firefly. In a vast universe, you are in control of the lives of a number of pawns on a “RimWorld”, a planet far from the core of civilization. All ages of technology coincide on these planets, and the struggle for survival can be harsh as you seek to overcome obstacles like solar storms, plagues, and hoards of man-hunting rabbits.

There are tons of mods you can add to the game for a superb experience, but one of my favorite ways to dig into RimWorld is through the use of mods that alter the theme to a medieval aesthetic. In this way, almost everything in the game can be altered so that you get the immersive feeling of setting up a small medieval community and watching it grow, whilst trying to stay out of the way of the big kingdoms that are duking it out across the map in a titanic feudal power struggle.

Note: the expansions are totally necessary for many of these mods.

Posted in these interests:
h/gaming144 guides
h/modding0 guides
Mod ManagerMod Manager
Mod Manager

Mod Manager isn’t a medieval mod, specifically, but trust me, you’ll want to use it to organize your mods.

Harmony & HugsLibHarmony & HugsLib
Harmony & HugsLib

Harmony is just a library mod that other mods use as a reference to get cool things done. You’re going to need it for many of the mods that you want to use, so just load it up.

You’ll also want to grab HugsLib while you’re at it. Another library mod that’s required for even more mods, this is another no-brainer if you want to have any mods active at all.

Allow ToolAllow Tool
Allow Tool

Allow Tool is a must for any RimWorld playthrough. The base game doesn’t handle some things very well, but Allow Tool opens up a wide dimension of easy control for your little colony.

Beautiful OutdoorsBeautiful Outdoors
Beautiful Outdoors

Beautiful Outdoors is another quality of life mod. Normally, your pawns get really sick of being outside, but this helps change their perceptions of nature — important for an overhaul that has them in the great outdoors a lot!

BlueprintsBlueprints
Blueprints

Blueprints is one of the best mods for helping you build your little colony in a timely fashion, without having to micromanage quite so much. Just set a template room up, copy it, and paste it whenever you need to build the same sort of room again!

BridgelloBridgello
Bridgello

Bridgello is a great mod aesthetically, but it’s also just plain useful, giving you a great way to build all-important bridges across bodies of water.

Camping TentCamping Tent
Camping Tent

Camping Tent just makes sense. Why don’t the pawns in RimWorld ever have an intermediate space between indoor living and being naked in a rainstorm? Tents solve everything, and make a ton of sense for a medieval game.

Caravan AdventuresCaravan Adventures
Caravan Adventures

Caravan Adventures is super cool. Not only does it add some new features to the caravaning process, it also adds a great storyline that perks the whole experience up.

Caravan Mood BuffCaravan Mood Buff
Caravan Mood Buff

Caravan Mood Buff is vital if you actually want to enjoy having your pawns go out on adventures. Without this, they’re ridiculously grumpy all the time.

Character EditorCharacter Editor
Character Editor

Character Editor is totally a quality of life mod, but it’s pretty essential under most circumstances, especially if you want to control the aesthetic flavor of your playthrough.

Common SenseCommon Sense
Common Sense

Common Sense seems like a good idea, right? So many of the pawns’ behavior in the base game comes across as idiotic—only existing for the sake of making the game hard. This solves that, helping pawns actually act intelligently.

Dreamer's DreamsDreamer's Dreams
Dreamer’s Dreams

Dreamer’s Dreams brings dreams and nightmares to your pawns, adding a lot of wonderful depth to their little pawn lives.

Faction CustomizerFaction Customizer
Faction Customizer

Faction Customizer is entirely vital for an aesthetic playthrough as it gives you the ability to micromanage how all the factions appear and function in the game.

Faction ManagerFaction Manager
Faction Manager

Faction Manager makes it possible to really expand and build beyond a single colony. This way, you can freeze one colony and go found another, freeing you from having to micromanage multiple colonies at the same time. This means you can spread your empire across the world!

Fortifications - NeolithicFortifications - Neolithic
Fortifications – Neolithic

Fortifications – Neolithic offers a ton of neolithic fortification options, dramatically broadening your defensive possibilities in a low-tech setting.

Fortifications - MedievalFortifications - Medieval
Fortifications – Medieval

Fortifications – Medieval brings awesome medieval fortifications to the game, allowing you to build the defensive keep or castle of your dreams!

Fortifications - Medieval - MaterialFortifications - Medieval - Material
Fortifications – Medieval – Material

Fortifications – Medieval – Material is the second module in the medieval fortifications series, and it’s great! Adds a bunch of options for early gameplay and more.

Giddy-up!Giddy-up!
Giddy-up!

Giddy-up! is an amazing series of mods that really makes a medieval playthrough possible. After all, what would a medieval game be like if you couldn’t have your knight riding to battle on the back of a horse? There are a few mods in the Giddy-up! Line-up that you’ll want to have, though, so make sure to grab them all.

Go the F*** to SleepGo the F*** to Sleep
Go the F*** to Sleep

Go the F*** to Sleep is a simple mod that ensures you can tell colonists to go to sleep when YOU need them to. Honestly, nothing would get done around here if you didn’t micromanage it.

Guards For MeGuards For Me
Guards For Me

Guards For Me super useful if you want your castle to actually be defended properly. This way, you can have your soldiers patrolling while your other pawns work hard on building your new palace throne room.

Medieval OverhaulMedieval Overhaul
Medieval Overhaul

Medieval Overhaul concentrates on fulfilling all your medieval playthrough dreams, adding tons of clever little features and generally overhauling the experience to one that feels truly medieval.

Medieval Empire OverhaulMedieval Empire Overhaul
Medieval Empire Overhaul

Medieval Empire Overhaul takes the super-advanced “Empire” faction from Royalty and alters it so that it fits the medieval aesthetic. Now you can actually feel like you’re undertaking diplomatic efforts with a powerful kingdom of the dark ages! This requires Medieval Overhaul to run.

MendAndRecycleMendAndRecycle
MendAndRecycle

MendAndRecycle just makes sense, but especially for people in a medieval setting! Not being able to repair things in the base setting always seemed a bit silly, and now this gets rectified!

More Than CapableMore Than Capable
More Than Capable

More Than Capable helps your pawns actually tackle the harsh world around them. Sure, they might not be good at things, but when push comes to shove they just need to get to work! This makes even more sense in a setting that’s supposed to be medieval!

No Random RelationsNo Random Relations
No Random Relations

No Random Relations just helps ensure that random relationship incidents don’t mess up the really fun medieval experience that you’re going for.

RPG Style Inventory RevampedRPG Style Inventory Revamped
RPG Style Inventory Revamped

RPG Style Inventory Revamped turns the management of a pawns gear into something resembling a classic RPG experience, perfect for the medieval D&D vibe!

Realistic Rooms RewrittenRealistic Rooms Rewritten
Realistic Rooms Rewritten

Realistic Rooms Rewritten makes so much sense with any playthrough, but far more sense when you’re setting out to play a medieval run. You can even control the size of the rooms further through the mod menu. Since I always thought the room size requirements for pawn happiness were wonky, this is a must have mod for me.

Rimedieval - Medieval ConversionRimedieval - Medieval Conversion
Rimedieval – Medieval Conversion

Rimedieval – Medieval Conversion is totally brilliant because it patches other mods, and certain aspects of the game (like the end quest) to keep them all in line with a medieval aesthetic. That way you can enjoy your favorite mods without having immersion-breaking additions.

Vanilla Fishing ExpandedVanilla Fishing Expanded
Vanilla Fishing Expanded

Vanilla Fishing Expanded is a necessity to provide additional food sources since some are eliminated by the lack of more advanced tech.

Supersonic's Medieval TweaksSupersonic's Medieval Tweaks
Supersonic’s Medieval Tweaks

Supersonic’s Medieval Tweaks does what it says: it tweaks a bunch of minor content points to help provide a better medieval experience.

Babies and ChildrenBabies and Children
Babies and Children

Babies and Children is essential for a medieval RimWorld playthrough. Now you can have a real dynasty form, and, if you use one of the aging or time-alteration mods, you could even watch entire generations of your little kingdom drift by. Make sure to read the page for this mod, it has instructions for a couple of required mods you’ll need to install alongside.

Medieval MedicinesMedieval Medicines
Medieval Medicines

Medieval Medicines widens the medical possibilities so you’re not stuck up the old crick without a paddle next time infection sets in.

Medieval ProstheticsMedieval Prosthetics
Medieval Prosthetics

Medieval Prosthetics opens a new realm of prosthetic possibility for your wounded pawns, without breaking the medieval flavor!

Entosomnia - Medieval CryptosleepEntosomnia - Medieval Cryptosleep
Entosomnia – Medieval Cryptosleep

Entosomnia – Medieval Cryptosleep . A sarcophagus filled with insect jelly and lined with intricate arcane conduits allows for indefinite suspension of living beings. Medieval cryptosleep replacement.

QuarryQuarry
Quarry

Quarry allows you to collect rocks and resources even if you spawned your kingdom on a map tile without hills and mountains! Pretty important, since stone is going to be your main construction element.

Geothermal CoolersGeothermal Coolers
Geothermal Coolers

Geothermal Coolers makes playing in a medieval setting far more possible. Without a method to cool your food, your have to do some pretty weird workarounds, or resort to installing one of the magic mods that offers cooling crystals. This is a nice middle ground.

Standalone Hot SpringStandalone Hot Spring
Standalone Hot Spring

Standalone Hot Spring allows you to use your hot springs for a whole different purpose: keeping your pawns happy and healthy!

Medieval drug labMedieval drug lab
Medieval drug lab

Medieval drug lab is a tiny patch that makes the drug lab accessible even if another mod has locked it out for being too high a tech level. Important!

Pure Medieval SoundtrackPure Medieval Soundtrack
Pure Medieval Soundtrack

Pure Medieval Soundtrack provides over 40 brand new music tracks by the masterful Alexander Nakrada. These tracks are all original, and all fall under the creative commons 4.0 copyright law.

Medieval Cross-Functionality Patches+Medieval Cross-Functionality Patches+
Medieval Cross-Functionality Patches+

Medieval Cross-Functionality Patches+ offers compatibility for a bunch of medieval mods, and I highly recommend using it!

What are your favorite medieval mods?What are your favorite medieval mods?
What are your favorite medieval mods?

There are so many brilliant mods out there for RimWorld, and it can get pretty overwhelming to install them all, but hopefully this list helps get you started on your next grand adventure.

I know there are probably tons of mods that I’ve missed, so go ahead and let me know in the comments what your favorite medieval mods are for RimWorld. What do you think I should have added?

Get your wishlist ready for these games!
BrittBritt Britt (92)
Dec 27, 2021
0

With so many games released every year, it can be difficult to keep track of them all! The past couple years have made us very familiar with game delays, disappointments, and surprising successes.

Follow @howchoo and learn cool things:

Are you a passionate writer? We’re hiring!

Write for Howchoo

Like what we do?

Donate

Want to support Howchoo? When you buy a tool or material through one of our Amazon links, we earn a small commission as an Amazon Associate.

How to Access the Parent Dashboard on Messenger Kids

JamieJamie Jamie (33)
Jan 4, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone. With Messenger Kids, parents can control their child’s online experience through a variety of functions that allow them to have a safe and secure online experience.

The Parent Dashboard is the hub for all the means to control your child’s online experience in Messenger Kids. Here, you’ll be able to add and remove contacts, block contacts, edit your child’s information, see the images your child is sending and receiving, and more.

This guide will show you how to access the Parent Dashboard in Messenger Kids.

Posted in these interests:
h/kids9 guides
  1. Open the Facebook app and tap the three horizontal lines in the bottom right.
  2. Scroll down and select ‘Messenger Kids
  3. Click your child’s photo

The Parent Dashboard is organized in to three sections: Activity – View recent contacts, groups, blocked contacts, reports, and images sent and received in chats. Contactsadd and remove contacts here. * Controls – access parent controls. You can add additional parents and guardians here.

Please Note: there are some Parent Dashboard features that are exclusively available on mobile.

  1. Open Facebook on your desktop and navigate to the ‘Explore‘ section on the left side.
  2. Select ‘Messenger Kids
  3. Select your child’s name.
JamieJamie Jamie (33)
Jan 3, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.

How to Access the Parent Dashboard on Messenger Kids

JamieJamie Jamie (33)
Jan 4, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone. With Messenger Kids, parents can control their child’s online experience through a variety of functions that allow them to have a safe and secure online experience.

The Parent Dashboard is the hub for all the means to control your child’s online experience in Messenger Kids. Here, you’ll be able to add and remove contacts, block contacts, edit your child’s information, see the images your child is sending and receiving, and more.

This guide will show you how to access the Parent Dashboard in Messenger Kids.

Posted in these interests:
h/kids9 guides
  1. Open the Facebook app and tap the three horizontal lines in the bottom right.
  2. Scroll down and select ‘Messenger Kids
  3. Click your child’s photo

The Parent Dashboard is organized in to three sections: Activity – View recent contacts, groups, blocked contacts, reports, and images sent and received in chats. Contactsadd and remove contacts here. * Controls – access parent controls. You can add additional parents and guardians here.

Please Note: there are some Parent Dashboard features that are exclusively available on mobile.

  1. Open Facebook on your desktop and navigate to the ‘Explore‘ section on the left side.
  2. Select ‘Messenger Kids
  3. Select your child’s name.
JamieJamie Jamie (33)
Jan 3, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.

 

How to Access the Parent Dashboard on Messenger Kids

JamieJamie Jamie (33)
Jan 4, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone. With Messenger Kids, parents can control their child’s online experience through a variety of functions that allow them to have a safe and secure online experience.

The Parent Dashboard is the hub for all the means to control your child’s online experience in Messenger Kids. Here, you’ll be able to add and remove contacts, block contacts, edit your child’s information, see the images your child is sending and receiving, and more.

This guide will show you how to access the Parent Dashboard in Messenger Kids.

Posted in these interests:
h/kids9 guides
  1. Open the Facebook app and tap the three horizontal lines in the bottom right.
  2. Scroll down and select ‘Messenger Kids
  3. Click your child’s photo

The Parent Dashboard is organized in to three sections: Activity – View recent contacts, groups, blocked contacts, reports, and images sent and received in chats. Contactsadd and remove contacts here. * Controls – access parent controls. You can add additional parents and guardians here.

Please Note: there are some Parent Dashboard features that are exclusively available on mobile.

  1. Open Facebook on your desktop and navigate to the ‘Explore‘ section on the left side.
  2. Select ‘Messenger Kids
  3. Select your child’s name.
JamieJamie Jamie (33)
Jan 3, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.

How to Access the Parent Dashboard on Messenger Kids

JamieJamie Jamie (33)
Jan 4, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone. With Messenger Kids, parents can control their child’s online experience through a variety of functions that allow them to have a safe and secure online experience.

The Parent Dashboard is the hub for all the means to control your child’s online experience in Messenger Kids. Here, you’ll be able to add and remove contacts, block contacts, edit your child’s information, see the images your child is sending and receiving, and more.

This guide will show you how to access the Parent Dashboard in Messenger Kids.

Posted in these interests:
h/kids9 guides

How to Access the Parent Dashboard on Messenger Kids

Parent Dashboard Messenger Kids
JamieJamie Jamie (33)
Jan 4, 2022
0
Jamie
 
Posted in these interests:
h/kids9 guides
Posted in these interests:
h/kids9 guides
 
In these interests
h/kids9 guides
h/kids9 guides
  1. Open the Facebook app and tap the three horizontal lines in the bottom right.
  2. Scroll down and select ‘Messenger Kids
  3. Click your child’s photo

The Parent Dashboard is organized in to three sections: Activity – View recent contacts, groups, blocked contacts, reports, and images sent and received in chats. Contactsadd and remove contacts here. * Controls – access parent controls. You can add additional parents and guardians here.

  1. Open the Facebook app and tap the three horizontal lines in the bottom right.
  2. Scroll down and select ‘Messenger Kids
  3. Click your child’s photo

The Parent Dashboard is organized in to three sections: Activity – View recent contacts, groups, blocked contacts, reports, and images sent and received in chats. Contactsadd and remove contacts here. * Controls – access parent controls. You can add additional parents and guardians here.

How to Access Parent Dashboard on iPhone or Android

Please Note: there are some Parent Dashboard features that are exclusively available on mobile.

  1. Open Facebook on your desktop and navigate to the ‘Explore‘ section on the left side.
  2. Select ‘Messenger Kids
  3. Select your child’s name.

Please Note: there are some Parent Dashboard features that are exclusively available on mobile.

  1. Open Facebook on your desktop and navigate to the ‘Explore‘ section on the left side.
  2. Select ‘Messenger Kids
  3. Select your child’s name.

How to Access Parent Dashboard on Desktop

JamieJamie Jamie (33)
Jan 3, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.

JamieJamie Jamie (33)
Jan 3, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.

NEXT UP
How to Edit Your Child’s Information in Messenger Kids
messenger kids edit info
JamieJamie Jamie (33)
Jan 3, 2022
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Related to this guide:
messenger kids edit infomessenger kids edit info
Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.
In these interests: kids
Messenger Kids sleep modeMessenger Kids sleep mode
Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.
In these interests: kids
messenger kids blockmessenger kids block
Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.
In these interests: kids
messenger kids edit infomessenger kids edit info
Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.
In these interests: kids
Jamie's profile pictureView guide
In these interests: kids
kids
Messenger Kids sleep modeMessenger Kids sleep mode
Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.
In these interests: kids
Jamie's profile pictureView guide
In these interests: kids
kids
messenger kids blockmessenger kids block
Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.
In these interests: kids
Jamie's profile pictureView guide
In these interests: kids
kids
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How to Set Up Sleep Mode in Messenger Kids

JamieJamie Jamie (28)
Jan 3, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone. With Messenger Kids, parents can control their child’s online experience through a variety of functions that allow them to have a safe and secure online experience.

One of the ways you can control your child’s online experience is with Sleep Mode. Sleep mode allows parents to manage when their child can use the app, by choosing what time of day sleep mode begins and ends. While Messenger Kids is in sleep mode, your child will not be able to use the app.

This guide will show you how to set up Sleep Mode in Messenger Kids.

Posted in these interests:
h/kids9 guides
  1. Open the Facebook app.
  2. Select the three horizontal lines.
  3. Scroll down to Messenger Kids
  4. Select your child’s account.
  5. Select ‘Controls
  6. Select ‘Sleep Mode
  7. Use the button to turn sleep mode on for weekdays or weekends.
  8. Select your ideal window of time to begin and end Sleep Mode.
  1. Open Facebook, and navigate to the ‘Explore‘ section on the left.
  2. Select Messenger Kids.
  3. Select your child’s name (on the left).
  4. Click the gear.
  5. Select Sleep Mode.
  6. Click the button to select ‘During the Week’ or ‘On weekends’
  7. Set your start and stop times.
  8. Select ‘Done
JamieJamie Jamie (28)
Jan 4, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.

How to Set Up Sleep Mode in Messenger Kids

JamieJamie Jamie (28)
Jan 3, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone. With Messenger Kids, parents can control their child’s online experience through a variety of functions that allow them to have a safe and secure online experience.

One of the ways you can control your child’s online experience is with Sleep Mode. Sleep mode allows parents to manage when their child can use the app, by choosing what time of day sleep mode begins and ends. While Messenger Kids is in sleep mode, your child will not be able to use the app.

This guide will show you how to set up Sleep Mode in Messenger Kids.

Posted in these interests:
h/kids9 guides
  1. Open the Facebook app.
  2. Select the three horizontal lines.
  3. Scroll down to Messenger Kids
  4. Select your child’s account.
  5. Select ‘Controls
  6. Select ‘Sleep Mode
  7. Use the button to turn sleep mode on for weekdays or weekends.
  8. Select your ideal window of time to begin and end Sleep Mode.
  1. Open Facebook, and navigate to the ‘Explore‘ section on the left.
  2. Select Messenger Kids.
  3. Select your child’s name (on the left).
  4. Click the gear.
  5. Select Sleep Mode.
  6. Click the button to select ‘During the Week’ or ‘On weekends’
  7. Set your start and stop times.
  8. Select ‘Done
JamieJamie Jamie (28)
Jan 4, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.

 

How to Set Up Sleep Mode in Messenger Kids

JamieJamie Jamie (28)
Jan 3, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone. With Messenger Kids, parents can control their child’s online experience through a variety of functions that allow them to have a safe and secure online experience.

One of the ways you can control your child’s online experience is with Sleep Mode. Sleep mode allows parents to manage when their child can use the app, by choosing what time of day sleep mode begins and ends. While Messenger Kids is in sleep mode, your child will not be able to use the app.

This guide will show you how to set up Sleep Mode in Messenger Kids.

Posted in these interests:
h/kids9 guides
  1. Open the Facebook app.
  2. Select the three horizontal lines.
  3. Scroll down to Messenger Kids
  4. Select your child’s account.
  5. Select ‘Controls
  6. Select ‘Sleep Mode
  7. Use the button to turn sleep mode on for weekdays or weekends.
  8. Select your ideal window of time to begin and end Sleep Mode.
  1. Open Facebook, and navigate to the ‘Explore‘ section on the left.
  2. Select Messenger Kids.
  3. Select your child’s name (on the left).
  4. Click the gear.
  5. Select Sleep Mode.
  6. Click the button to select ‘During the Week’ or ‘On weekends’
  7. Set your start and stop times.
  8. Select ‘Done
JamieJamie Jamie (28)
Jan 4, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.

How to Set Up Sleep Mode in Messenger Kids

JamieJamie Jamie (28)
Jan 3, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone. With Messenger Kids, parents can control their child’s online experience through a variety of functions that allow them to have a safe and secure online experience.

One of the ways you can control your child’s online experience is with Sleep Mode. Sleep mode allows parents to manage when their child can use the app, by choosing what time of day sleep mode begins and ends. While Messenger Kids is in sleep mode, your child will not be able to use the app.

This guide will show you how to set up Sleep Mode in Messenger Kids.

Posted in these interests:
h/kids9 guides

How to Set Up Sleep Mode in Messenger Kids

Messenger Kids sleep mode
JamieJamie Jamie (28)
Jan 3, 2022
0
Jamie
 
Posted in these interests:
h/kids9 guides
Posted in these interests:
h/kids9 guides
 
In these interests
h/kids9 guides
h/kids9 guides
  1. Open the Facebook app.
  2. Select the three horizontal lines.
  3. Scroll down to Messenger Kids
  4. Select your child’s account.
  5. Select ‘Controls
  6. Select ‘Sleep Mode
  7. Use the button to turn sleep mode on for weekdays or weekends.
  8. Select your ideal window of time to begin and end Sleep Mode.
  1. Open the Facebook app.
  2. Select the three horizontal lines.
  3. Scroll down to Messenger Kids
  4. Select your child’s account.
  5. Select ‘Controls
  6. Select ‘Sleep Mode
  7. Use the button to turn sleep mode on for weekdays or weekends.
  8. Select your ideal window of time to begin and end Sleep Mode.

How to set up Sleep Mode on your iPhone or Android

  1. Open Facebook, and navigate to the ‘Explore‘ section on the left.
  2. Select Messenger Kids.
  3. Select your child’s name (on the left).
  4. Click the gear.
  5. Select Sleep Mode.
  6. Click the button to select ‘During the Week’ or ‘On weekends’
  7. Set your start and stop times.
  8. Select ‘Done
  1. Open Facebook, and navigate to the ‘Explore‘ section on the left.
  2. Select Messenger Kids.
  3. Select your child’s name (on the left).
  4. Click the gear.
  5. Select Sleep Mode.
  6. Click the button to select ‘During the Week’ or ‘On weekends’
  7. Set your start and stop times.
  8. Select ‘Done

How to set up Sleep Mode on your desktop

JamieJamie Jamie (28)
Jan 4, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.

JamieJamie Jamie (28)
Jan 4, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.

NEXT UP
How to Access the Parent Dashboard on Messenger Kids
Parent Dashboard Messenger Kids
JamieJamie Jamie (28)
Jan 4, 2022
0
Jamie Continue reading
Share this guide!
RedditEmailTextPinterest
Jamie's profile pictureJamie's profile pictureJamie
Joined in 2021 28 guides
Managing Editor of Howchoo
Jamie's profile pictureFrogPreacher
Related to this guide:
Parent Dashboard Messenger KidsParent Dashboard Messenger Kids
Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.
In these interests: kids
messenger kids edit infomessenger kids edit info
Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.
In these interests: kids
messenger kids blockmessenger kids block
Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.
In these interests: kids
Parent Dashboard Messenger KidsParent Dashboard Messenger Kids
Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.
In these interests: kids
Jamie's profile pictureView guide
In these interests: kids
kids
messenger kids edit infomessenger kids edit info
Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.
In these interests: kids
Jamie's profile pictureView guide
In these interests: kids
kids
messenger kids blockmessenger kids block
Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.
In these interests: kids
Jamie's profile pictureView guide
In these interests: kids
kids
People also read:
Slow Media Modern Waldorf & Montessori Kids Can Watch!Slow Media Modern Waldorf & Montessori Kids Can Watch!
If you’re looking for slow media for your modern Waldorf child, this list is for you.
Slow Media Modern Waldorf & Montessori Kids Can Watch!Slow Media Modern Waldorf & Montessori Kids Can Watch!
If you’re looking for slow media for your modern Waldorf child, this list is for you.
messenger kidsmessenger kids
messenger kidsHow To Add and Remove Contacts From Your Child’s Messenger Kids Account
Slow Media Modern Waldorf & Montessori Kids Can Watch!Slow Media Modern Waldorf & Montessori Kids Can Watch!
Slow Media Modern Waldorf & Montessori Kids Can Watch!Slow Media Modern Waldorf & Montessori Kids Can Watch!
Posted in these interests:
kidskids
Explore
h/kids 9 guides
kidskids
Explore
h/kids 9 guides
Explore
Discuss this guide!
Discover interesting things!
Explore Howchoo’s most popular interests.
Explore

Follow @howchoo and learn cool things:

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How to Block Someone in the Messenger Kids app

JamieJamie Jamie (28)
Jan 3, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone. With Messenger Kids, parents can control their child’s online experience through a variety of functions that allow them to have a safe and secure online experience.

This guide will show you how to block someone in Messenger Kids.

Posted in these interests:
h/kids9 guides
  1. Open the Messenger Kids app.
  2. Find the person you want to block and click on their photo.
  3. Click on the gear.
  4. Click ‘Block
JamieJamie Jamie (28)
Jan 4, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.

How to Block Someone in the Messenger Kids app

JamieJamie Jamie (28)
Jan 3, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone. With Messenger Kids, parents can control their child’s online experience through a variety of functions that allow them to have a safe and secure online experience.

This guide will show you how to block someone in Messenger Kids.

Posted in these interests:
h/kids9 guides
  1. Open the Messenger Kids app.
  2. Find the person you want to block and click on their photo.
  3. Click on the gear.
  4. Click ‘Block
JamieJamie Jamie (28)
Jan 4, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.

 

How to Block Someone in the Messenger Kids app

JamieJamie Jamie (28)
Jan 3, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone. With Messenger Kids, parents can control their child’s online experience through a variety of functions that allow them to have a safe and secure online experience.

This guide will show you how to block someone in Messenger Kids.

Posted in these interests:
h/kids9 guides
  1. Open the Messenger Kids app.
  2. Find the person you want to block and click on their photo.
  3. Click on the gear.
  4. Click ‘Block
JamieJamie Jamie (28)
Jan 4, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.

How to Block Someone in the Messenger Kids app

JamieJamie Jamie (28)
Jan 3, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone. With Messenger Kids, parents can control their child’s online experience through a variety of functions that allow them to have a safe and secure online experience.

This guide will show you how to block someone in Messenger Kids.

Posted in these interests:
h/kids9 guides

How to Block Someone in the Messenger Kids app

messenger kids block
JamieJamie Jamie (28)
Jan 3, 2022
0
Jamie
 
Posted in these interests:
h/kids9 guides
Posted in these interests:
h/kids9 guides
 
In these interests
h/kids9 guides
h/kids9 guides
  1. Open the Messenger Kids app.
  2. Find the person you want to block and click on their photo.
  3. Click on the gear.
  4. Click ‘Block
  1. Open the Messenger Kids app.
  2. Find the person you want to block and click on their photo.
  3. Click on the gear.
  4. Click ‘Block

How to Block Someone in Messenger Kids

JamieJamie Jamie (28)
Jan 4, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.

JamieJamie Jamie (28)
Jan 4, 2022
0

Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.

NEXT UP
How to Access the Parent Dashboard on Messenger Kids
Parent Dashboard Messenger Kids
JamieJamie Jamie (28)
Jan 4, 2022
0
Jamie Continue reading
Share this guide!
RedditEmailTextPinterest
Jamie's profile pictureJamie's profile pictureJamie
Joined in 2021 28 guides
Managing Editor of Howchoo
Jamie's profile pictureFrogPreacher
Related to this guide:
Parent Dashboard Messenger KidsParent Dashboard Messenger Kids
Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.
In these interests: kids
messenger kids edit infomessenger kids edit info
Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.
In these interests: kids
Messenger Kids sleep modeMessenger Kids sleep mode
Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.
In these interests: kids
Parent Dashboard Messenger KidsParent Dashboard Messenger Kids
Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.
In these interests: kids
Jamie's profile pictureView guide
In these interests: kids
kids
messenger kids edit infomessenger kids edit info
Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.
In these interests: kids
Jamie's profile pictureView guide
In these interests: kids
kids
Messenger Kids sleep modeMessenger Kids sleep mode
Facebook’s Messenger Kids is a free app that allows children to make video calls and send messages on smartphones and tablets, but with more control than just giving your child access to a phone.
In these interests: kids
Jamie's profile pictureView guide
In these interests: kids
kids
People also read:
Slow Media Modern Waldorf & Montessori Kids Can Watch!Slow Media Modern Waldorf & Montessori Kids Can Watch!
If you’re looking for slow media for your modern Waldorf child, this list is for you.
Slow Media Modern Waldorf & Montessori Kids Can Watch!Slow Media Modern Waldorf & Montessori Kids Can Watch!
If you’re looking for slow media for your modern Waldorf child, this list is for you.
messenger kidsmessenger kids
messenger kidsHow To Add and Remove Contacts From Your Child’s Messenger Kids Account
Slow Media Modern Waldorf & Montessori Kids Can Watch!Slow Media Modern Waldorf & Montessori Kids Can Watch!
Slow Media Modern Waldorf & Montessori Kids Can Watch!Slow Media Modern Waldorf & Montessori Kids Can Watch!
Posted in these interests:
kidskids
Explore
h/kids 9 guides
kidskids
Explore
h/kids 9 guides
Explore
Discuss this guide!
Discover interesting things!
Explore Howchoo’s most popular interests.
Explore

Follow @howchoo and learn cool things:

Are you a passionate writer? We’re hiring!

Write for Howchoo

Like what we do?

Donate

Want to support Howchoo? When you buy a tool or material through one of our Amazon links, we earn a small commission as an Amazon Associate.

Write for HowchooDonate