bought this as typing speed practice and got possessed instead
DEAD LETTER DEPT.
- Release Date:
- Jan 30, 2025
- Developer:
- Mike Monroe, Belief Engine
- Publisher:
- Belief Engine
- Platforms:
- Windows Linux
Game Tags
About This Game

AFTER MOVING TO THE BIG CITY
you got yourself an apartment, and secured a temp data entry job- just to keep you afloat till something better comes along. YOUR OFFICIAL TITLE IS A DATA CONVERSION OPERATOR, but you're really more like a warm body who types up all the junk computers still can't read.

D A Y - T O - D A Y
you go to work & process the images displayed on your terminal, and type up whatever random text is in front of you. Whatever can be made out, that is.
Sometimes the mail you receive is a little strange- letters and lost mail, some mangled and twisted, that have travelled from place to place with nowhere else to go.
Sometimes, it feels like it's talking to you directly through the screen...
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USE YOUR KEYBOARD to type in various prompts, and attempt to decipher damaged images
MULTIPLE ENDINGS & buried secrets to uncover
NO TWO PLAYTHROUGHS are exactly the same (Estimated playtime: 120min per run)
A MASSIVE AMOUNT OF MAIL to voyeur through, and catch glimpses into other lives
ATMOSPHERIC HORROR MOOD with rich sound designed to crawl under your skin
Mouse & Keyboard are REQUIRED
Key re-binding is available, but a keyboard with Function Keys and Control Keys (Insert, Page Up/Page Down) is strongly recommended.
Featured in the HauntedPS1's Spectral Mall Demo Disc collection

Screenshots
User Reviews
"hang on, just gonna send this postcard with graphic details of me cannibalising someone to some fucking guy in Idaho" - Dahpprentice, probably (Apprenmer? Dahpprenmer? I'm overthinking this) Ever play Typing of the Dead? Well, this isn't that. This is a horror narrative tackling themes of hopelessness, oppression, and the wonderful world of gainful (not really) employment. I've actually played this a few times, but I couldn't finish it, usually because I had other things to do and the game would only let me save once before it deleted said save, which was kind of a pain in the ass. I get that it's meant to be done in largely one run as it's a shorter title, but still - little tedious. I finally got around to finishing it this final time by mostly speedrunning the game, which took me... just over an hour? Anyway, I digress. Dead Letter Dept. is a game that challenges the typical gameplay loop by literally putting you through a loop, reflecting the monotony of certain jobs that real...
Finally a game that tackles one of the scariest experiences of all, being stuck in a shitty data entry job Pretty unique short and sweet concept. Not only was it genuinely oppressive (props to the audio design), I didn’t expect to come away from it feeling more pensive than anything. Since you’re actually forced to type out every postcard word for word with minimal mistakes, it did a good job progressing the player from paying most attention to all the unnerving sounds and computer glitches (a bit cheap but works), to being hyperfocused on trying to push through the intentional repetition. You know it's a dead-end job but you need to make rent, so you have to keep typing. But the more you type, the more mind-numbing it gets, the more your fingers start to creak, the time you need to make your quota keeps getting shorter and the postcards get more and more illegible. The walls are closing in and you wish you could find something else already, but rent is still due and this is all y...
As someone who's last job of 3 years was working as a document specialist (which is just data entry clerk with a fancy name) I was immediately interested in this game and it did not disappoint. It got quite a few scares out of me, the atmosphere is amazing, sound design is great (the keyboard clicking noises was satisfying in itself) and the story, while still a bit lost on me is intriguing. I see a little piece of myself in this game. Thank you for making it ❤️
Goddamn a+ game. Dead letter dept. achieves what mouthwashing could never.
My first playthrough was 2.5 hours long. I felt a bit ill half way through, which I think is the mark of a really good horror game (especially considering the game has no gore to feel ill from). It also struck a special chord with me, as I recently moved abroad and into my own proverbial "big city". The game made me think about everyday work, about how we build ourselves and our selves around our work, about letters and about all of the ways that something said might never meet the person it was meant for. Thanks for the experience, I had a good, horrific Friday evening!
Fun mix of typing with horror, though it desperately needs a brightness slider. Try the demo to check if you can actually see anything first. I got this on offer through the Bloody Keys bundle, since I already had [b]Blood Typers[/b]. I like typing, and typing games, but usually have a very low tolerance for genuinely scary horror. I can handle campy over the top stuff like [b]Blood Typers[/b] and the [b]Resident Evil[/b] games, but have never been able to get far in games like [b]Amnesia[/b] and [b]Phasmophobia[/b]. I [i]have[/i] gotten all the way through to the first possible ending in [b]Dead Letter Dept[/b], so I think it's safe to say that it's on the lower end of scariness, though there are some slight jump-scares with static and visual effects on the screen. So far none of them have come with a loud noise though, which is usually the bigger problem. I did resort to walking backwards or while facing the floor near the end of the game though, so there might be things I delibera...
Honestly I didnt know much going into this. Ive really enjoyed this resurgence of lo fi horror and this game is just it. It is stylistic with out being hamfisted. It is interesting with out showing too much. It is just really really rad.
This is a pretty unique game and some parts are very scary and tense such as when you are leaving your apartment and some ghoul is following you but I ultimately gave up because I encountered two parts in the game where the instructions were very unclear. I made a post about one of these sections and the dev responded very quickly which was nice but when I reloaded the game to try again the game put me in another section where I had no idea what to do and I just gave up after that. This section involved typing in a series of letters exactly as shown on the monitor, however halfway through the letters turn into a < symbol which you can't type in. And if you try to experiment and input what you think it is, your progress on that section is erased and you have to type everything in to get to that point again. I'm not a big fan of that type of game design. I'm not sure why you are only allowed to save and load once either. I hope this person does keep making games though because it's a uni...
Excellent atmosphere and build-up of tension. I've been wanting something almost exactly like this (I was thinking photocopying stuff instead of mail), and it's really cool to see it realized!
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System Requirements
Minimum
- Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
- OS *: Windows 7 or higher, 64bit
- Processor: Intel CPU Core i3
- Memory: 8 GB RAM
- Graphics: Nvidia GTX 460
- Storage: 3 GB available space
- Additional Notes: Keyboard & Mouse required
Recommended
- Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
- OS: Windows 10
- Processor: Intel CPU Core i7
- Memory: 16 GB RAM
- Graphics: Nvidia GPU GeForce GTX 660 or higher
- Storage: 3 GB available space
- Additional Notes: Keyboard & Mouse required
FAQ
How much does DEAD LETTER DEPT. cost?
DEAD LETTER DEPT. costs $14.99.
What are the system requirements for DEAD LETTER DEPT.?
Minimum: Minimum: Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system OS *: Windows 7 or higher, 64bit Processor: Intel CPU Core i3 Memory: 8 GB RAM Graphics: Nvidia GTX 460 Storage: 3 GB available space Additional Notes: Keyboard & Mouse required Recommended: Recommended: Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system OS: Windows 10 Processor: Intel CPU Core i7 Memory: 16 GB RAM Graphics: Nvidia GPU GeForce GTX 660 or higher Storage: 3 GB available space Additional Notes: Keyboard & Mouse required
What platforms is DEAD LETTER DEPT. available on?
DEAD LETTER DEPT. is available on Windows PC, Linux.
Is DEAD LETTER DEPT. worth buying?
DEAD LETTER DEPT. has 97% positive reviews from 34 players.
When was DEAD LETTER DEPT. released?
DEAD LETTER DEPT. was released on Jan 30, 2025.
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