
We’ll learn more about the state of the game's development in the coming weeks, Kesler wrote, promising to update people excited about Allison Road on social media channels.įor an unreleased crowdfunding project, Allison Road has cultivated quite a fanbase since it was announced last year. A statement given in June by the company indicated that it had dropped the title. How far long the project is now remains unclear, although it seems unlikely that publisher Team17 will continue to work with Lillith Ltd. "I started making a few changes to the story, a few scribbles here and there, some layout tests and before I knew it it sort of organically picked up pace.

"I took a bit of time off Allison Road, went back to work and had a good look at all the stuff that had been done up to that point," creator Christian Kesler wrote on Facebook.

was the jumping off point for Allison Road, not the blueprintĪfter fans of the game’s social media page noticed new activity - for the first time since the project was killed - the team declared in a post that Allison Road is again in development. No other video game demo has had quite the impact as PT, with the five following horror games directly inspired by it in one way or another.P.T. It inspired other studios to release their own cryptic demos, like we saw with the Resident Evil 7 Beginning Hour demo, and its first-person horror gameplay was mimicked by a number of copycats. RELATED: PT: How to Get the Silent Hills Playable Teaser Backĭespite PT being a demo that was only available for a short time, it had a huge impact on the industry, especially the horror genre.

Despite PT's popularity, Konami canceled Silent Hills, canned Hideo Kojima, and even went so far as to pull PT from the PlayStation Store, making it inaccessible to anyone who didn't download it before. 7780s Studio didn't actually exist, and it turned out that PT stood for "Playable Teaser" - and that the teaser was for Silent Hills, an exciting collaboration between Hideo Kojima, Guillermo del Toro, and Norman Reedus. Five years ago on August 12, 2014, at Gamescom, Konami released a demo for a mysterious horror game called PT on the PlayStation Store, which it claimed was being developed by a studio called 7780s Studio.
