Before Playing
Video games and interactive media may cause symptoms for some people, including people with no known history of those symptoms.
- Symptoms may include eye strain, headache, dizziness, nausea, disorientation, anxiety, or panic attacks.
- In rare cases, flashing lights or visual patterns may trigger seizures in people with photosensitivity.
- Do not play when extremely tired, sleep-deprived, ill, or under heavy stress.
- Children or younger players should play with guardian supervision.
Photosensitivity and Flashing
The game may include intermittent darkness, high contrast, visual distortion, and panic effects. We aim to avoid unsafe flashing, but display settings, room lighting, and player sensitivity vary.
- Stop immediately if you notice altered vision, uncomfortable flashing, eye or muscle twitching, dizziness, or loss of focus.
- Lower brightness and contrast if the image feels uncomfortable, and use suitable room lighting.
- Do not sit too close to the screen, and take breaks when moving between dark and high-contrast scenes.
- If you have ever had a seizure triggered by flashing or visual patterns, consult a doctor before playing.
When to Stop Playing
Stop playing immediately if you experience any unusual symptom. Do not try to finish a scene if your body, breathing, or vision is affected.
- Dizziness, nausea, severe headache, blurred vision, or altered vision.
- Eye or muscle twitching, loss of awareness, severe confusion, or involuntary movement.
- Shortness of breath, chest pain, rapid heartbeat, or panic attack.
- Severe anxiety, overwhelming fear, or trouble separating the game from reality after stopping.
- Seek emergency medical help for loss of consciousness, suspected seizure, chest pain, breathing difficulty, or severe symptoms.
Safer Play Guidance
These steps may reduce strain, but they cannot guarantee that symptoms will not occur.
- Play in a softly lit room, not in complete darkness.
- Sit at a comfortable distance from the screen and keep the display at eye level.
- Use moderate volume and avoid setting headphones to an uncomfortable level.
- Take short breaks regularly, especially after chase or high-panic scenes.
- Use reduced shake or reduced effect settings when available.
- Stop if the psychological horror affects your sleep, mood, or breathing.
Psychological Horror Notice
THE RAM'S EYE is not only a chase game. It explores a child's phobia, distorted perception, family voices, shadows, a watching eye, and a home slowly turning into a nightmare.
- The experience may include sudden sounds, whispers, footsteps behind the player, and distorted family voices.
- It may show unclear faces, black silhouettes, long hallways, deceptive mirrors, and intermittent lighting.
- The game is not a medical diagnosis or treatment for phobia or trauma. It is a fictional narrative experience.
- If these themes cause severe distress, avoid playing or play with someone you trust nearby.
Safety References
This page was prepared with general guidance on flashing and photosensitivity in mind. The decision to play, pause, or stop remains with the player or guardian.
Three flashes or below threshold guidance.
General information on photosensitivity and seizure triggers.
Report a Comfort or Access Issue
If you notice uncomfortable flashing, harmful audio, or an effect that causes discomfort, send us the scene description, settings, and device details.