Because of the proximity voice chat and hilarious, terrifying organic moments, the game became a massive hit on YouTube and Twitch. It sold over 1.8 million copies in its first few months. ⚖️ 3. The Death Blow: The Lawsuit
Rebranded as Friday the 13th: The Game , the team launched a Kickstarter campaign in late 2015. Horror fans went wild, and the game raised over $800,000 to bring Jason Voorhees back to life. 2. The Golden Era: Viral Success
The game featured various versions of Jason from the movies, original music by franchise composer Harry Manfredini, and motion-capture kills performed by legendary Jason actor Kane Hodder. friday-the-13th-game
In the early 2010s, a small team at and developer IllFonic began working on an indie project called Slasher Vol. 1: Summer Camp . It was designed as a love letter to 1980s slasher films.
One player controlled an overpowered Jason with teleportation and sensing abilities. Up to seven counselors had to repair cars, fix phone lines to call the police, or pull off an incredibly complex, multi-step process to actually kill Jason. Because of the proximity voice chat and hilarious,
Sean S. Cunningham, the director of the original 1980 Friday the 13th film, saw the project and was so impressed that he approached the developers. He offered them the official Friday the 13th license for free.
An asymmetrical multiplayer game where one player controls an unstoppable killer and several others play as defenseless camp counselors trying to survive. The Death Blow: The Lawsuit Rebranded as Friday
Victor Miller, the screenwriter of the original 1980 Friday the 13th movie, used a provision in US copyright law to reclaim the rights to his original screenplay. This sparked a brutal legal battle between Miller and Sean Cunningham (the director/producer).