

ORDER 13 Delivers Psychological Thrills to PS5 and Xbox Series X/S
Cybernetic Walrus's logistics center horror arrives on consoles via JanduSoft
7 March 2026
Warehouse Horror Hits Consoles#
According to a press release from JanduSoft, ORDER 13 is now available on PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X/S. Developed by Cybernetic Walrus, the psychological thriller places players inside a logistics center where things aren't quite what they seem.
The game explores themes of isolation and surveillance within the confines of a warehouse environment, a setting that trades traditional horror locations for the sterile, oppressive atmosphere of modern logistics infrastructure. It's a bold choice that taps into something genuinely unsettling - the kind of spaces most of us have experienced but rarely think about as horror material. There's something inherently creepy about those endless rows of shelving, the hum of conveyor belts, and the feeling of being watched by cameras at every turn.
Players navigate the facility while uncovering the darker secrets lurking beneath its mundane surface. The gameplay leans heavily into environmental storytelling and atmosphere rather than jump scares, rewarding exploration and attention to detail. You'll piece together what's really happening through documents, environmental clues, and the increasingly disturbing behavior of the facility's automated systems. The surveillance aspect isn't just thematic - it's mechanical, with security systems tracking your movements and creating genuine tension as you try to avoid detection while investigating.
Console Launch Details#
JanduSoft is handling publishing duties for the console release, bringing ORDER 13 to current-generation PlayStation and Xbox platforms. The game previously launched on PC via Steam earlier this year, where it built a small but dedicated following among horror fans looking for something different from the usual genre offerings. This expansion marks its debut on Sony and Microsoft's latest hardware, with the developers taking advantage of the DualSense controller's haptic feedback on PS5 to enhance the tactile experience of interacting with warehouse equipment and feeling the rumble of machinery around you.
The logistics center setting offers a fresh take on psychological horror, moving away from abandoned asylums and haunted houses toward something more grounded in contemporary anxieties about automation, corporate control, and the dehumanizing aspects of modern work environments. It's the kind of horror that feels uncomfortably relevant - anyone who's worked in retail, warehousing, or any heavily monitored workplace will recognize the oppressive atmosphere immediately. The game doesn't need supernatural elements to feel threatening when the real horror comes from systems designed to maximize efficiency at the expense of human dignity.
This approach puts ORDER 13 in conversation with other recent horror games that find terror in mundane settings, though few have tackled the specific dread of modern logistics spaces. Where other indie horror titles might rely on darkness and monsters, ORDER 13 finds its scares in fluorescent lighting, productivity metrics, and the creeping realization that you're just another item to be processed and sorted.

Ready for Delivery#
ORDER 13 is available now for PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X/S through their respective digital storefronts. Console players can finally experience what PC gamers have been navigating through since the game's initial release, complete with optimizations for the new hardware that ensure smooth performance even when the game's atmosphere is anything but comfortable.
For those wondering about the time investment, the main story runs about 4–6 hours depending on how thoroughly you explore, with additional content unlocking for players who dig deeper into the facility's secrets. It's priced accordingly as a shorter, focused experience rather than a sprawling epic - the kind of game you can knock out in a weekend while it stays under your skin for much longer.
Are you picking this one up, or does the warehouse setting not click for you? Let us know if you've already played the PC version and whether console players should add this to their horror rotation.
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