The big Resident Evil Requiem interview at Eurogamer pushed survival horror back to the front of every gaming feed. Capcom’s confidence in the genre is a reminder that a lot of mobile players never stopped. The seven survival horror games for Android below cover the spectrum: a true console port, the indie atmospheric chillers, and a few of the free spook-fests that fill a half-hour at night.

What to look for in a survival horror game on Android

Five things matter:

Quick comparison

GameBest forFree planStyleCombat
Five Nights at Freddy’sTight tension loopsDemo or paidCamera-room siegeNone
GrannyQuick chase escapeYesSandbox escapeNone
Eyes Horror & Coop MultiplayerCo-op multiplayer scaresYesMansion explorationNone
Resident Evil 4Console-grade survival horrorPaidThird-person actionHeavy
Specimen ZeroOpen-world online survivalYesFirst-person hide-and-runLight
Dead Trigger 2Action-horror shooterYesFirst-person zombieHeavy
SlendrinaFree atmospheric chillerYesFirst-person explorationNone

The games

1. Five Nights at Freddy’s, the camera-room siege

Five Nights at Freddy’s is still the gold standard for tense, low-action horror on a phone. The original game ports cleanly to Android, the controls match the desktop version, and the loop of monitoring cameras while managing power is a perfect mobile fit. The sequels each add wrinkles, with FNAF 2 adding the Freddy mask and FNAF 4 dropping the cameras for an audio-only loop.

The series suits short sessions because every night is its own contained tension arc.

Where it falls short: the camera-static art style does not show off a phone’s display. Each game in the series is a separate paid purchase.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS, Windows, consoles.

Download: Google PlayApp Store

Bottom line: the right pick for tightly-paced jump scares without a long story commitment.

2. Granny, the free chase escape

Granny is the free chase-escape that millions of phone owners have already met through clips. The premise is escape a house in five days while a hyper-attentive grandmother stalks it. The puzzles are environmental, the inventory is small, and a single misstep ends the run.

The game is designed to be re-run, so the difficulty levels reward learning the layout rather than holding a hand. The sequels (Granny 2, Granny 3) add new houses and antagonists.

Where it falls short: the visual style is rough by design. Ad load on the free tier is heavy.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS.

Download: Google PlayApp Store

Bottom line: the right pick for a free chase loop you can finish in under an hour.

3. Eyes Horror & Coop Multiplayer, the mansion explorer

Eyes Horror & Coop Multiplayer sends you into a haunted mansion to recover bags of cash while a ghost hunts you. The format is closer to a stealth horror than a chase, with hiding spots, alternate routes, and an enemy that is faster than you can ever be. The co-op multiplayer mode is the recent addition that pulled the game back to the front of the genre.

It is the right shape for groups who want mild horror together rather than alone.

Where it falls short: the multiplayer requires an account and stable connection. Single-player content is shorter than the marketing suggests.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS.

Download: Google PlayApp Store

Bottom line: the right pick when your friends want to be scared together.

4. Resident Evil 4, the console-grade pick

Resident Evil 4 is the Capcom remaster that brought the original GameCube classic onto modern phones. Touch controls are the obvious compromise, but Bluetooth gamepad support is full and works well. The full campaign is here, including Separate Ways, and the visual fidelity holds up on a Snapdragon 8-class phone.

It is the most expensive game on the list and the best argument for a phone as a serious gaming device.

Where it falls short: demanding hardware. Touch controls strain in the action peaks. Storage requirement is significant.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS, Mac.

Download: Google PlayApp Store

Bottom line: the right pick when you want a real console survival horror in your pocket.

5. Specimen Zero, the open-world hide-and-run

Specimen Zero is a first-person open-world survival horror that drops you into a quarantined town with a single creature hunting you across districts. The exploration is non-linear, the inventory management matters, and the night cycle changes the threat density. Online co-op lets up to four players run the same town together.

The game is free to download with optional currency for cosmetics; the campaign is not paywalled.

Where it falls short: performance on lower-end hardware is patchy. The voice acting is workmanlike at best.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS.

Download: Google PlayApp Store

Bottom line: the right pick when you want an open-world hide-and-run with friends.

6. Dead Trigger 2, the action-horror shooter

Dead Trigger 2 is the Madfinger-developed first-person zombie shooter that has been on Android since the genre was new. The campaign runs across continents, the gunplay is tight, and the mid-game introduces side missions that turn into a small base-building loop. It earns the survival-horror label through atmosphere rather than mechanics.

The free path covers the entire campaign with grinding; the in-game shop sells time savers rather than power.

Where it falls short: monetisation pressure builds in mid-game. The horror lean is light compared to the rest of the list.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS, Windows, browser.

Download: Google PlayApp Store

Bottom line: the right pick when you want zombies and shooting more than ambient dread.

7. Slendrina, the free atmospheric chiller

Slendrina is the long-running DVloper series that put first-person mobile horror on the map. The format is tight: explore a small house, find keys, evade Slendrina, try not to look at her. There are several entries (X, Asylum, The Cellar) and most are free to download.

It is the right closer because it asks for nothing except patience and headphones, and it delivers atmosphere on a budget.

Where it falls short: assets are reused across the series. Ad load on the free tier interrupts the mood.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS.

Download: Google PlayApp Store

Bottom line: the right pick when you want a free, tight chiller with headphones at night.

How to pick the right one

If you want the standard tension loop, install Five Nights at Freddy’s.

If you want a free chase escape, install Granny.

If you want to be scared with friends, install Eyes Horror & Coop Multiplayer.

If you want a real console-grade survival horror, install Resident Evil 4.

If you want an open-world creature hunt, install Specimen Zero.

If you want zombies and shooting, install Dead Trigger 2.

If you want a free atmospheric chiller for a phone screen, install Slendrina.

FAQ

What is the best free survival horror game for Android?

Granny and Slendrina are the strongest free picks for tight, atmospheric horror. Specimen Zero is the strongest free pick for open-world and co-op.

Is Resident Evil 4 a full port on Android?

Yes. The Capcom Android release ships the full campaign and the Separate Ways DLC, with optimisations for touch and gamepad input. Hardware requirements are higher than most mobile games.

Are these games suitable for younger players?

No. Survival horror as a genre includes graphic violence and intense psychological pressure. Treat each title’s content rating as the minimum guidance, not a recommendation.

Do I need a gamepad for survival horror on Android?

Strongly recommended for Resident Evil 4 and Dead Trigger 2. The other titles are designed touch-first and play well without one.

Can I play these games offline?

Five Nights at Freddy’s, Granny, Resident Evil 4, and Slendrina all run offline. Eyes Horror & Coop Multiplayer, Specimen Zero, and Dead Trigger 2 require a network for online and in-game shop features.