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Choo-choo Charles LinkIn a landscape of bloated, serious horror games, Choo-Choo Charles is a lean, mean, eight-legged machine. It proves that with a singular vision and a genuinely terrifying concept, one person with a laptop can create a monster that haunts your dreams—and your commute. This solo-dev origin explains both the game’s scrappy charm and its limitations. The island is relatively small. The side quests are repetitive. The human NPCs are static and wooden. But these aren’t bugs—they’re features. The game wears its budget-consciousness on its sleeve, and that B-movie aesthetic is precisely what makes the horror feel so playful yet intense. The game builds toward a single, cinematic boss fight. After collecting three “eggs” to power up your train, you lure Charles into a ritual circle in the island’s center. The fight strips away exploration: you’re on a circular track, Charles is faster than ever, and you must circle-strafe like a tank battle from hell. Choo-Choo Charles If you’ve scrolled through TikTok, Twitch, or Twitter over the last year, you’ve seen it: a grinning, spider-legged locomotive with blood-red eyes, barreling through a misty forest. It looks like a child’s crayon drawing of a monster brought to life through a fever dream. In a landscape of bloated, serious horror games, Trust me. Have you faced Charles yet? Did you find the secret rocket launcher upgrade? Let me know in the comments below—and keep your boiler stoked. 🚂🕷️ The island is relatively small
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