Tomb Of Destiny -ch. 1 Ch. 2 V0.3- -ongoing- ((free))
While Chapter 1 is linear, Chapter 2 (introduced and refined in v0.3) starts to open up the gameplay loop.
Notably, two chapters in, Tomb of Destiny has yet to reveal its monster, curse, or central supernatural twist. This is a gamble. Modern serialized readers, accustomed to immediate payoff, may grow restless. Yet for those who appreciate slow-burn dread—the kind found in Algernon Blackwood’s The Willows or the early reels of The Exorcist —this restraint is a virtue. The tomb itself is described as a character: its corridors breathe, its murals seem to shift when not directly observed, and the air carries a taste of iron and time. The author understands that a locked door is more terrifying than the thing behind it—at least for now. Tomb of Destiny -Ch. 1 Ch. 2 v0.3- -Ongoing-
The "-Ongoing-" tag is the most important suffix. The developer has released a public roadmap showing plans for Chapter 3 (due in Q4 of this year) and eventual Chapters 4 and 5. By jumping in at v0.3, you get to experience the story as it evolves, participate in polls that influence future content, and provide feedback directly to the creator. While Chapter 1 is linear, Chapter 2 (introduced
The most effective choice in Chapter 1 is its rejection of a high-octane cold open. Instead, we are introduced to the protagonist in a moment of quiet, professional routine—perhaps examining an artifact, reviewing a map, or navigating academic politics. This mundanity serves a dual purpose. First, it grounds the fantastical elements to come in a recognizable reality. Second, it allows the first hint of the “anomaly”—an inscription that doesn’t fit, a local legend that contradicts official history, a shadow seen in a photograph—to land with genuine weight. The prose in v0.3 leans into sensory detail: the grit of dust on a leather journal, the too-cold draft in a sun-baked dig house, the silence of a tomb that listens back . This is horror-adjacent writing, and it works. The tomb is not yet a location; it is a promise of violation. The author understands that a locked door is