16 February 2026

Games Where Enemies Become Scared Of You

By newsgame


Many action games are power fantasies that enable players to step into the shoes of beings who can accomplish feats beyond imagination, some of which are just downright scary. While it might not always be the main selling point, these games shine in their ability to empower, and a brilliant way to show that is by having AI enemies react out of pure fear. They might scream, beg for mercy, run away, or act irrationally; either way, the outcome is the same. They are scared of you.

To be most effective, this mechanic needs to be triggered by the player’s direct actions rather than obviously scripted events, even though the latter can still be satisfying. Let’s take a look at a wide assortment of games that incorporate these types of reactions, ranging from RPGs to stealth and open-worlds.

Enemies Will Only Be Aggressive For So Long

The Elder Scrolls 5: Skyrim was a step backward in some ways for the Elder Scrolls series. While the great attention to side quests remained, the game’s over-simplification of weapon, magic, and skill systems greatly diminished the build diversity that earlier games were known for. One way that Skyrim moved forward, however, was the graphical and technical fidelity of the game, which gave way to much more dynamic NPCs.

Enemies, if pushed to their limits during combat, will crouch and begin begging for mercy instead of continuing to fight. This gives the Dragonborn some time to recover if they’re low on health, but keep in mind that enemies, even once fearful of you, can be provoked again.

Death Stranding 2

Best Open-World Games That Make You Think

These video games are far from mindless entertainment, making players ponder everything from strategy to philosophical concepts.

Enemies Fear Big Boss, And Can You Blame Them?

Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain lets you decide how to approach most missions. Players are dropped a ride away from their target, which is usually an enemy camp, and they have to then plan how they want to complete their task. For most folks, the first step will probably be stealth, but guns blazing is a viable candidate as well.

The Phantom Pain‘s AI enemies learn from their failures, with soldiers trying to adapt to counter previous tactics. This could be something as simple as wearing helmets to avoid a headshot, but it can take various forms. Beyond just taking Big Boss seriously, you can also engage in some good old-fashioned psychological warfare by messing with formations, eliminating allies, and causing chaos while staying hidden. Even when all hell breaks loose, Big Boss still feels like the aggressor, with his targets entering a panic state of fight or flight.

6

Sleeping Dogs

A Crime-Focused Open World Title With A Twist

Sleeping Dogs is an underrated open-world title, all things considered. It had the same humor and charm of the much-loved Grand Theft Auto series, albeit in smaller doses to accommodate a very different story tone-wise. The setting feels vast and alive, and while this game does let you play as a gangster, there’s a very interesting twist in the form of the protagonist being an undercover police officer with a personal stake in the unfolding story.

Leveling up Face XP, one of the three levels players can put experience into, makes the protagonist’s moves more brutal and hard-hitting, which causes enemies to reel back in fear, instinctively aware of the danger they’re facing.

5

Carrion

You Are The Monster That Humanity Fears

Quite a few games either cast players as a villain or let them role-play as one if they wish, but Carrion is in a league of its own. There is no other way to describe the playable character other than a Lovecraftian horror monster, and the poor humans who exist in this world react accordingly. Fear is at the heart of the gameplay loop, and the protagonist’s mere existence is enough to send NPCs into fits of panic as they scream and scatter.

Vanille in Final Fantasy 13 (2010)

10 RPGs Where You’re Treated Like the Monster

Don’t be ashamed, you’re the hero, despite what NPCs think in these RPGs, where everyone seems to believe you’re a monster.

The playable character grows gradually bigger throughout the campaign, prompting armed units to arrive, lockdowns, and more drastic attempts to contain the outbreak. As you become stronger, the resistance starts to feel more futile. Honestly, the humans barely feel like “enemies,” as that suggests they are somewhat on equal footing. This is slaughter.

4

Ghost of Tsushima & Yōtei

The Ghost Stance…Become The Myth

Sucker Punch’s historical open-world games are, ultimately, both about revenge. In Ghost of Tsushima, Jin seeks to take out the Mongol army that has occupied his home, and he might have to surrender his samurai code of conduct to get that job done. In Ghost of Yōtei, Atsu is on a more personal mission, as she seeks out the Yotei Six who massacred her family when she was young. While they are quite different characters, both of them slip into “The Ghost” persona, an almost mythical being that brings vengeance.

In both games, players eventually unlock the Ghost Stance, which instantly puts the fear of death into enemies. You generally need to complete a few kills in a row to trigger this stance, but it is unavoidable during the campaigns. The Ghost Stance is the most iconic way that Atsu and Jin can scare enemies, but it isn’t the only one. Standoffs that end with an enemy’s death can cause their allies to retreat or just hesitate, and the same can be said for strategic kills that take out a camp’s leader. In Ghost of Yōtei, Atsu unlocks Onryo Howl pretty early on, which is like a less intimidating version of the Ghost Stance.

3

Batman Arkham Games

Gotham’s Underworld Has Every Reason To Fear The Dark Knight

Here it is – the series everyone has been waiting for. Rocksteady’s Arkham games are synonymous with this concept, as Batman uses fear to send Gotham’s worst into a state of hysteria. Admittedly, this mostly only happens with henchmen, but you spend most of the games fighting these nobodies anyway. While he loves to just beat some sense into enemies, Bats occasionally decides to take the stealth approach, hanging from the rafters as he quietly takes out one thug after another.

As they find their unconscious partners, enemies begin to lose their minds. They know Batman is here, but they cannot see him. They know he can get them at potentially any time, and they don’t know how to stop him. They know they are his prey. They begin to act stupidly and abandon any real tactics or formation, meaning it gets progressively easier to take them out. Even their dialogue is defined by fear. All the main games (Asylum, City, Knight, Origins, and Shadow) feature this aspect to an extent, but the most complete version is in Arkham Knight.

2

Middle-earth: Shadow Of War

The Bright Lord Is A Fearful Figure

Shadow of War takes the inherent mechanics of its predecessor and universally enhances them all, providing players with a deeper nemesis system, better mount mechanics, more satisfying combat, and a slew of open-world locations to navigate and explore. The game’s satisfying and visceral combat only becomes more so when seeing enemies react to Talion’s raw strength and speed, acting as the fearsome Bright Lord.

Brutalizing enemies from stealth will send uruks running in fear, but getting especially brutal finishers on enemies in normal combat or setting off environmental effects such as explosive grog barrels or insect nests has a similar effect, mastering the Bright Lord’s foes through pure fear as they all run in terror.

1

Battle Brothers

Morale Is Vital To Success

Battle Brothers stands out as a monumentally engaging open-world roguelike, giving players the freedom to develop their band of mercenaries and forge legendary fighters through contracts and encounters — or die trying. The game’s build system is incredibly expansive and diverse, and a variety of innate traits come with every mercenary, or ‘brother’ as they’re colloquially known, hired by the player. Some of these traits expressly affect morale, having brothers who are braver than most or begin every battle with confidence, or, conversely, are timider than most, and will lose morale faster in battle.

If a player is successful in battle, cutting through enemies with brutality and sustaining little damage in the meantime, enemy units will dynamically reassess the situation and, if their morale is low enough, they will flee in terror from you and your army of fearsome mercenaries.

8-Best-Open-World-Games-Where-You-Start-Powerful,-Ranked

8 Best Open-World Games Where You Start Powerful, Ranked

These open world games bestow great power and talents on the player right from the outset, and they only get stronger from there.