tvtropes.org

Dead Estate - TV Tropes

  • ️Fri Oct 22 2021

Dead Estate (Video Game)

Crawling, shooting, searching, running
Everywhere while trouble's coming
Endless hallways breathing down my neck
But I am not succumbing
Don't know where I am, A sea of endless rooms
There's no outrunning
Dangers left and right, you wanna win?
You better start outgunning!

Dead Estate is an Action Horror Roguelike developed by Milkbar Lads and published by 2 Left Thumbs. Originally created on Newgrounds for Halloween 2020, it was later given an Updated Re-release as a fully-priced purchasable game on October 19th 2021 for PC via Steam and itch.ionote .

The year is 1998. The place is somewhere deep in the Leelanau woods. After their truck breaks down, late-night trucker Jeff Jefferson and hitchhiker Jules Halili find themselves in the middle of a huge zombie attack! Their only respite is a foreboding dark mansion teeming with horrors, which they quickly find themselves trapped in. With the help of some newfound allies, they quickly begin trying to escape before they get killed.

However, it quickly becomes very apparent that there's a lot more going on at this mansion than just monsters running amok. Jeff, Jules and their friends soon find themselves tangled up in a dizzying array of plots ranging from extraplanar pseudo-deities demanding Human Sacrifice to cultists trying to resurrect a dead planet-eating monster to failed lab experiments and a giant nigh-indestructible mutant rat that is hell-bent on killing everything in sight. Welcome...to the Dead Estate.

Gameplay consists of clearing rooms on a floor to find a Boss Key, which can then be taken to a Boss Room to fight the level's boss. Along the way you'll collect different weapons and items which offer a variety of abilities, as well as purchase items and level stats at the various shops, which are all run by the smokin' Hot Witch Cordelia Valentine.

The game received six post-launch updates for three years after its initial release. The first, "Home Theater," was released on October 25, 2022, and added intro cutscenes for the unlockable characters and a ton of new enemies, bosses, items and weapons. The second update, "Bombs Away", released on December 29, 2022 and added BOSS as a playable character as well as the bonus sub-floors. The third update, "Heaven and Hell", released on February 14 2023 and added Filia and Faith's Hellmart and Heavenmart mechanic and a new set of unlockable costumes. The fourth update, "Axe To Grind", released on April 28th 2023 and added the final playable character, Axel, as well as "a shitload of bug fixes" and a rework of Chunks' mechanics. The fifth update, "Assignment Anya", released on December 21st 2023 and added 11 new unique challenges to the gamenote , as well as an entire separate full-on Survival Horror mini-campaign called Assignment Anya which takes place shortly before the events of the main game. The sixth and final update, "Good Night", released on October 28th 2024 and added four new levels, a new Final Boss and ending, D-costumes, a new set of challenges and many miscellaneous additions, including over 100 new weapons and items.


START TROPING...if you want to live:

open/close all folders 

Main Game 

  • 100% Completion: Achieved by unlocking every single medal in the game that was not added in an update. This includes unlocking every Costume B for and getting the true ending with every character that isn't BOSS or Axel, and a handful of challenge runs.
  • Abandoned Area: The Abandoned Set is completely deserted... until you try to pick up the boss key, upon which the game will pretend to crash and you will start getting chased down by a Chunks made of TV static.
  • Abandoned Laboratory: The game's fourth main level is the Laboratory, Albert Valentine's long-neglected upper-mansion lab where he conducted his experiments, most of which are now running amok after escaping from their containment units. It also features giant crushers on the ceiling for seemingly no reason.
  • Achievement Mockery: The achievement "Dirty Dawg" is earned by staring at the shop screen (and Cordelia and her bust) for two uninterrupted minutes.
  • Action Girl: A major part of the game's appeal is how many various ass-kicking and attractive women you can play as; Jules is a fiesty Tank-Top Tomboy, Cordelia is a large-breasted Hot Witch, Fuji is a towering Amazonian Beauty, Lydia is a sharply-dressed Lady in a Power Suit and BOSS is a ripped Sarashi-clad Dark Action Girl.
  • Ancient Tomb: The second floor of the alternative path takes place inside of a cursed pyramid.
  • Anvil on Head: Sudden Death gives a chance for an anvil to fall on top of an enemy, causing immense damage.
  • Amazonian Beauty: Fuji is a shredded girl in a skintight pink leotard. Doubly so for Champion Fuji, who is dressed in flamboyant and revealing Masked Luchador garb that shows off her gigantic six-pack.
  • Apocalypse Cult: The Mors Mundi Pro Supremo Leviathannote  cult, a completely separate threat adjacent to Diavola and her monsters, is an overarching villainous background organization trying to resurrect an Eldritch Abomination called the Leviathan using a month's worth of Human Sacrifices so that it can devour the world. All enemies in the game with the "Cult" prefix belong to this group, including Cult Grunts, Cult Knights and Cult Necromancers.
  • Anthropomorphic Food: The Pumpkin Prince, a massive Jack-o'-Lantern, serves as the boss of Dark Mood Woods.
  • Anti-Frustration Features:
    • Chunks slows down in rooms with other enemies still in them, so that the player has a fighting chance at avoiding him while dealing with anything else in the room.
    • Most long hallways in a level will have a room with a green prism near the end that offers a one-time teleportation back to the start so the player doesn't have to trudge back through a bunch of empty rooms.
    • Lydia's challenge, "Great Depression", has a gimmick where she is constantly losing money and will die the second she runs out. As such, bosses in this challenge which have long periods where they can't be damaged (such as the Golden Mask and the Static Demon) have gold pots in their arena to prevent you from always incurring a monetary loss on them.
    • Jules' second challenge, "No More Running", has her spawn in with a Dead Rat to permanently deactivate Chunks, because trying to to run away from Chunks while your only form of locomotion is Recoil Boosting would probably be the worst thing ever.
  • Art Evolution: Cutscenes made very early on in the game's development have a bit of a rougher, less developed artstyle to them with a lot more shading and darker, earthier colors. Everything after the Home Theater update is much brighter and more consistent in appearance.
  • Art Shift: The Portrait Demon is drawn and animated in a more realistic style than most other characters, adding to its already horrific appearance.
  • Art-Style Dissonance: The three Dream levels have really weird artstyles to enhance their strange and dreamlike qualities. Everything in the Dream is a cutesy, fluffy farm animal or crop, the Mindscape has a lot of Claymation and enemies that look like they were penciled on scratch paper, and the Nightmare looks straight out of a 2000s Creepypasta.
  • Avengers Assemble: Each Awakening ending provides a brief insight into what each character has been getting up to in the six years since 1998 before they are summoned back to the Estate via a Distress Call sent by Chunks after Albert is once again captured by Cybil:
    • Jeff's life has barely changed. He's still a long-haul trucker whose true home is the road, meaning he readily answers the SOS.
    • Jules has used her experiences from 1998 to become a professional monster killer, teaming up with a mysterious and sketchy dude named Jacques to hunt down paranormal creatures around the country. She immediately suits up after getting the signal and heads out.
    • Cordelia's life has changed the least, although she's a bit lonely since Fuji's career causes her to travel a lot. She immediately becomes aware of the two blood-red moons in the sky, one of which is cracking open, and sets out on her broomstick after getting the signal.
    • Fuji is winding down in the locker room after having just won a major championship belt in Arizona when she receives the signal and is jumped by a bunch of Mors Mundi cultists. It's Fuji, so there's only one way this encounter is going to end.
    • Digby is attending his first year of college with his girlfriend Wendy in Indiana. After getting the signal, the two of them start heading out in Digby's car.
    • Luis and Mumba are living together in Luis' RV in Texas. Luis misses Lydia, and Mumba feels washed-up with nothing to do. After receiving the call, Luis snaps Mumba out of it and the two set out on Luis' motorbike.
    • Lydia, now a successful businesswoman in California, is attending a swanky dance party when she receives the signal on her pager, before noticing the panic of the other partygoers and the Weird Moon outside wreaking havoc on the tides.
    • BOSS is in the middle of robbing a building somewhere out by Grand Rapids when she and her gang are assaulted by Mors Mundi cultists. She fights them off, and is interrupted by Digby and Wendy crashing their car through a wall and killing one of the cultists. BOSS recognizes Digby as the boy scout from 1998, and the three of them escape.
    • Axel has won an award for acting, somehow, but is still living with his mom. He gets the signal and sees the apocalypse starting outside, but decides to sleep in a little longer.
  • Bad Moon Rising: The game's Sequel Hook ends with the stars going out and two blood-red moons appearing in the sky to herald the apocalypse. In Lydia's Awakening Ending, the second moon is cracking open, indicating it might be some kind of egg for the reborn Leviathan...
  • Batter Up!: Digby's weapon of choice is a baseball bat. He can rack up a combo meter that increases his speed and fire rate as long as the combo is active.
  • Best Served Cold: The Mors Mundi Cult, still pissed off over their plans being screwed over in the Awakening Ending, spends years stalking every member of "The Heretics" in the hopes of not only picking them off at an opportune time, but also finding another way to bring their plans to fruition. And though they have little luck with killing Cordelia and her friends, they did kidnap Albert again with the aid of Cybil and an Evil Counterpart of Chunks. They also have managed to either bring back The Leviathan into the real world or found some other abomination to wreck the world with.
  • Betrayal Insurance: Cordelia's Dad created the Antidote in the event that Chunks became too unruly or impossible to control in his humanoid form. The Antidote transforms him back into a regular rat, although it appears he retains his intelligence and loyalty, as he opens the gate to the EXIT realm after it's administered.
  • The Big Damn Kiss: One of the 2003 pictures is of Fuji and Cordelia passionately kissing. The description only notes "no summary necessary for this one".
  • Big Fancy House: The Estate itself is a sprawling mansion with at least four main floors and hundreds of rooms. It has an entire subfloor dedicated to just the kitchen, and the attic is both an entire floor and housing a massive laboratory full of equipment. There is also a roof-wide widow's walk balcony and a steeple which holds the EXIT Realm portal machine. And that's not even getting into all the alternative floors, which seem to defy euclidean space to a degree. Assignment Anya implies that the EXIT realm gradually caused the Estate to become Bigger on the Inside and constantly shuffle around its rooms, but even in that game the Estate is still a sizable abode.
  • Bilingual Bonus: Anyone with a capable understanding of Latin can read the "Prayer to the Savior Leviathan Prince" which acts as the preface of the History of Mors Mundi Pro Supremo Leviathan:

    O sacred beast that slumbers amongst the stars, may you be our guardian, our beacon, our nourishment. Let our land be your dinner. Let our water be your wine. Digest the unclean world and leave the earth cleansed by your excrement.

  • Bird-Poop Gag: Gully is an item that allows a gull to swoop in and take a dump on enemies for plenty of damage from time to time.
  • Bittersweet Ending: The Normal ending has the player character defeating Chunks and escaping the Estate before it explodes with Cordelia's help, but the survivors never find out what exactly happened or what the true cause of everything is, meaning that Albert is still imprisoned in the Exit Realm and Diavola is free to restart her plans another day. It's especially bitter for Cordelia, since finding and saving Albert was the entire point of her storyline.
  • Bizarrchitecture: The Estate has one hell of a strange interior, considering how it possesses a crypt, dark forest, arena, film studio, a bank, several treatment clinics, a lab and an entire sunken ship somehow crammed into it. It's also possible due to the game's randomized floors that the whole building is some kind of Mobile Maze, which is outright confirmed in Assignment Anya as part of the EXIT's realm's taint on the house.
  • Bling-Bling-BANG!:
    • The Golden Gun. It has very few shots, but each one of them is extremely strong, capable of one-shotting most enemies and killing bosses in a couple of hits.
    • The Diamond Handgun and Shotgun. They may not deal as much damage as the Golden Gun, but they turn dead enemies into an immense amount of money.
  • Blob Monster: A boss of the Laboratory, "The Experiment" can sink into the floor and hurl chunks of itself at the player.
  • Bonus Dungeon: The Shrine is a potential alternate floor accessible from the Upper Story that has multiple extra Treasure Rooms as well as its elevator taking you immediately to the Balcony.
  • Boob-Based Gag: Two come from promotional material, and both involve Cordelia.
  • Boss-Altering Consequence: Assembling all four parts of the Silver Key by clearing the alternate floors will unlock the coffin on the balcony, which gives the player the Antidote. Bringing this into the boss fight with Chunks on the final floor and injecting him with it will transform him back into a normal rat, ending the fight immediately and unlocking the way into the EXIT Realm.
  • Boss-Only Level:
    • The Old Set is completely eerily abandoned save for the secret and item rooms and the floor's Boss Key, which upon pickup causes the boss of the stage, the Static Demon, to manifest.
    • The Dead Estate is the final level of the Normal Route, and is nothing but a short series of ominous rooms before a final confrontation with Chunks.
    • The Sacrifical Grounds are the same as the Dead Estate but for the True Ending, being a short series of rooms that lead up to a captured Albert, who is then levitated into Diavola's boss arena before she appears in person.
    • The Empty Space is the Dead Estate equivalent for the Awakening Route, simply a series of empty black rooms leading into the final fight with The Leviathan.
  • Boss Rush:
    • The Arena is a sub-floor where you have to kill several bosses in 140 seconds. It is difficult, but offers several items and plenty of money if you make it.
    • For its third phase, The Leviathan summons spectral apparitions of every single boss in the game that can possibly be encountered on the True Ending route (albeit with heavily truncated health so it's not completely impossible). Yes, this includes the Static Demon and Diavola's first phase.
  • Boss Subtitles: Each boss gets its name and a brief descriptor about it displayed as the boss fight starts.
  • Boxing Battler: Fuji, The Fighter. She is limited to using only her boxing gloves and other fist-weapons; any weapon she attempts to pick up is immediately destroyed.
  • Canon Welding: Several of the characters are either from past games produced by Milkbar Lads or are related to characters from those previous games.
    • Fuji is the mother of Apple, the protagonist of Bonkers.
    • Digby was originally a shopkeeper in Holy Smokes, and Faith was originally the player character.
    • Mumba is the protagonist of the Ugby Mumba Newgrounds games.
    • It is heavily implied that Ridgewood Road takes place in the same universe as Dead Estate via a handful of hints, including characters from the game appearing in a photo in Luis' wallet and a headline about the titular street showing up in the newspaper Lydia is reading in her intro.
    • The desktop holding all the Awakening Ending cutscenes as files is running on Shrimp-OS, implying that the operating system is used by the Mors Mundi cult (especially since The Leviathan is a shrimp).
  • Celebratory Body Tossing: In the true ending, the protagonists hoist the chosen player character up into the air, who then strikes a pose from JoJo's Bizarre Adventure.
  • Chainsaw Good: The Chainsaw is an extremely powerful melee weapon with a fast fire rate and great damage. The only thing holding it back is that you have to perpetually be very close to enemies for it to work its magic, but it's worth it.
  • Challenge Run: In addition to the challenges required to unlock characters' alternate costumes, there are 21 unique character-specific challenges which unlock adjustable game-wide Curses and the D-costume set after you beat them.
  • Chekhov's Apocalypse: All throughout the game, reference is made to the Mors Mundi cult's efforts to resurrect The Leviathan so that it might devour the Earth, but this is also mostly in the background to the main plot of rescuing Albert Valentine from the Exit Realm. Then the Awakening Endings show that Signs of the End Times have begun six years after the events of the first game, suggesting the cult may have succeeded in their plans after all...
  • Chest Monster: On occasion, weapon and item chests will be swapped out with classic Mimic monsters that will try to bite you. More noteworthily, a second shop can sometimes spawn on a floor containing the Cordelia Mimic, a monstrous simulacrum of Cordelia that will chase you down until it's killed. As shown in Assignment Anya, this creature is responsible for removing one of Chunks' arms.
  • Climactic Elevator Ride: The elevator up to the Dead Estate from the Balcony is the last elevator you'll take before facing off against the game's Disk-One Final Boss and determining which ending you're going to get.
  • Clothing Switch: Jules, Cordelia and Lydia can be seen trying on each others' outfits in the true ending. Jules' clearly, um, doesn't fit on Cordelia due to her large bosom, to her noticeable distress.
  • Coffin Contraband: The coffin located on the balcony contains the antidote to revert Chunks back to his diminutive state.
  • Collapsing Lair: In the normal ending, the entire mansion explodes as the player's character and Cordelia escape on her broom. In the true ending, it merely loses the top of the tower and suffers some broken windows.
  • Company Cross-References:
  • Concept Art Gallery: By beating various endings and challenges, you can unlock more and more concept artwork in the "Extras" menu that showcases the game's development. Hidden in certain images are clues which lead to the beginnings of an A Lternate Reality Game called Earth Died Screaming, which seems to tie Dead Estate together with Ridgewood Road at the very least.
  • Continuity Snarl:
    • In Luis' intro cutscene, he finds Jeff's truck abandoned in the middle of the road after Jeff and Jules were attacked by zombies. In BOSS' intro cutscene (which was added later), she drives Jeff's truck off the road and into a tree before entering the mansion. You could still rationalize this by saying that BOSS simply exited the truck after Luis arrived, the only problem being that she is being attacked by the same horde of zombies that attacked Jeff and Jules, indicating that they happened around the same time.
    • The Awakening Ending establishes that the True Ending is the canon route the story takes, which creates a minor continuity problem; unlocking the True Ending in the first place requires you to get the Normal Ending as Cordelia and permanently kill Chunks at least once. It can be solved with as simple an explanation as "Chunks is Nigh-Invulnerable and didn't really die", but still.
  • Conveniently Interrupted Document: The History of Mors Mundi Supremo Leviathan by M.M. Earle has three pages ripped out of it, conveniently interrupting the book just as it was about to explain what George V. Kostopoulos was instructed by the Leviathan to do in his mission.
  • Cosmic Horror Reveal: For the very first portion of the story (especially with all the Resident Evil homages), it may not be apparent that most of the monsters roaming the Estate are extraplanar creatures and that the overarching plot of the game concerns an Apocalypse Cult trying to bring about The End of the World as We Know It until the player has completed the True Ending at the very least and maybe even Assignment Anya.
  • Counting Sheep: Oko, the boss of the Dream, is a one-eyed sheep meant to invoke this concept, as the Dream as a whole is a level which represents peaceful sleep and dreaming about fuzzy animals.
  • Creepy Basement: The Basement is a pretty eerie room with how silent and dark it is. Thankfully, nothing there can hurt you and it serves as a Warp Zone.
  • Cutting Off the Branches: The Awakening Ending firmly establishes that the Normal Ending contradicts the canonical events of the story, and that Cordelia and her friends canonically restore Chunks back to a normal-sized rat, kill Diavola and foil the Mors Mundi cult's plans for the time being as shown in the True Ending.
  • Developer's Foresight: If you defeat Cybil on floor 4 and then encounter her shop afterwardnote , she will have a different shopkeeper portrait where she is missing her hood and heavily bruised and bandaged from the battle.
  • Did You Just Punch Out Cthulhu?: The True Final Boss is Diavola, an Eldritch Abomination from the Exit Realm who can be shot to death by the player. It's even more literal in Ms. Fuji's case where she can punch it to death.
  • Die, Chair, Die!: The Broken Stool item allows you to destroy otherwise untouchable furniture, allowing you to clear some space for yourself in crowded rooms and earn a little bit of extra cash similar to pots.
  • Difficulty Levels: There are five difficulty settings: Easy (which is given a variety of silly names with each playthrough), Normal, Painful, Nightmare, and X Must Die.
  • Disc-One Final Boss: Chunks is the final boss of the normal ending, which is the first ending the player can get. They'll have to beat the game two more times to even unlock the true ending, where Chunks is reduced to nothing more than a Cutscene Boss by pumping him full of the antidote, allowing him to open the gate to the EXIT realm.
  • Distant Finale: The game's final events end on a Sequel Hook in 2004, six years after the events of the True Ending.
  • Doesn't Like Guns: Fuji is a melee-only character, and angrily scraps any gun she touches. Digby is the same way because his dad told him not to touch guns, although he will permit himself to use melee weapons, non-explosive or non-incendiary weapons and magic staffs.

    Fuji: I've got plenty of guns RIGHT HERE! flexes

  • Don't Celebrate Just Yet: After beating Diavola in the Exit Realm, Cordelia (or her mother if you're playing as Cordelia) will pick both her father and the player up with her broom to fly off and escape the Exit Realm. However, the player is knocked off the broom during what appears to be the usual escape sequence, landing back on the platform to fight Diavola's One-Winged Angel form. The tip given for the level even hints to this happening: "Don't stop until you've reached the end".
  • Dream Land: The six Awakening Route levelsnote  are all supposedly taking place inside your sleeping character's dreams while they rest on the bed in the Upper Story. They're also heavily implied to be being manipulated by the Leviathan.
  • Dungeon Shop: There are various safe rooms with no enemies where you can purchase items, weapons and upgrade your stats from Cordelia, who is never in danger. When playing as her, these shops are taken over by her mother Roselia instead.
  • Early-Bird Cameo: Lydia gets the idea to go to the Estate after reading a newspaper headline which says "Haunted Mansion? Indie film crew still missing", which directly teases Axel's intro cinematic almost two years before he was added into the game. It also makes reference to the prison break caused by BOSS, teasing her being added in the following Bombs Away update.
  • Early-Installment Weirdness: Dead Estate Classic is obviously a lot smaller and more pared down compared to the full release, but it also has several elements that wouldn't appear later on:
    • Much of the spritework, character art and music looks and sounds anywhere from slightly off to entirely different from the main game.
    • Jeff and Jules are the only playable characters.
    • Cordelia's shops feature artwork of the player's current character interacting with her rather than a simple portrait of her. This was very obviously dropped in the full game for the simple reason that it would create so much extra work for a game with 10 playable characters, as that would require 40 drawings for the 4 main floors alone.
    • The minimap layout is very different, displaying a giant rectangle of the entire possible floor outline and also displaying rooms that are connected to each other as highlighted in pink. This was simplified to just displaying traversable rooms in the full release.
    • Many small quality-of-life features (being able to see your total health, damage numbers being displayed, hearts giving you extra money at full health, etc.) are absent.
    • There is no boss intro cutscene or Boss Subtitles to ease the player into a boss fight; the fight starts immediately upon entering a Boss Room.
    • The Laboratory and Balcony levels don't exist at all; clearing the Attic Sanctum takes you straight to the Dead Estate Boss-Only Level, and the Balcony's function of being one last chance to gear up is folded into it as it has a gun room and shop before the Boss Room. Instead of the mansion's Self-Destruct Sequence being triggered by the player shooting a lock on the door leading to the Exit Realm portal, there is instead a machine called the "Monster Maker" (which speaks with indignation upon being shot) which the destruction of leads into the self-destruct countdown and battle with Chunks. The Normal Ending is also the only ending and the same regardless of what character you picked.
    • Absolutely none of the game's overarching story is developed (there is no mention of Albert Valentine or his experiments, Chunks' origins are never explained, the Leviathan Egg and Mors Mundi cultists are present but not described, etc.) meaning the entire plot really is the very basic Trapped-with-Monster Plot it appears to be instead of the Cosmic Horror Reveal Halfway Plot Switch that the main game has to offer. Cordelia isn't even named at this point, only being referred to as "Witch" in the credits.
  • Eldritch Location: The Exit Realm is the hellscape which all of the monsters stalking the mansion have entered from and is the True Final Level of the game.
  • The End... Or Is It?: The very end of the True Ending credits finish with "The End" appearing, only for a bright red "...?" to slowly fade in after the words, teasing the existence of the Awakening route.
  • Enemy Summoner: The Elite Cultists you meet in looped runs summon other enemies to fight you while being quite tanky themselves.
  • Epic Flail: The cultist knights on the Second Story constantly twirl their flails around themselves, damaging you if you approach.
  • Enemy Roll Call: The Awakening Route ending features a list of every enemy in the game and their names along with the final credits.
  • Everybody Lives: The True Ending. Albert is reunited with Cordelia and Roselia, the rest of the playable cast gets to celebrate with their new friends, Chunks avoids being killed after being transformed back into a rat and even the Estate itself doesn't blow to smithereens like in the Normal Ending, instead sustaining only some minor damage to its steeple.
  • Evolving Title Screen: The main menu gets more detailed and the menu music gets more elaborate the more of the story the player completes.
  • Establishing Character Moment: Each character's intro cinematic is designed to instantly convey important imformation about them.
    • Jeff and Jules get the least of this, but it still establishes that Jeff is a kindly trucker when he picks up the hitchhiking Jules and that they're both Action Survivors.
    • Cordelia is introduced leafing through a scrapbook of her family's memories, instantly making it clear that the mansion is her family's home and that she's trying to find Albert.
    • Fuji is introduced with a flashback showing both how she became a renowned wrestler and how she and Cordelia met before showing her annihilating a horde of zombies, making it clear that she's both Cordelia's girlfriend and a One-Woman Army.
    • Mumba has a brief flashback to how he was transported out of his own world, establishing how he's from an entirely different game series.
    • Luis is introduced looking for Albert before calmly shooting a zombie square in the head with his magnum, explaining why he's at the Estate as well as showing off how he's The Stoic and demonstrating his 100% accuracy mechanic.
    • Lydia is introduced formulating a plan to sell the supposedly haunted Estate (complete with dollar signs forming in her eyes) and ignoring a zombie to get there, demonstrating her very singleminded Money Fetish and introducing the player to her money-centric mechanics.
    • Digby is introduced meekly trying to follow up on a job offer for a lab assistant to get his last merit badge, his eyes full of anxiety, instantly characterizing him as a Nervous Wreck who is nevertheless very adventurous for a child.
    • BOSS is introduced with a flashback to her escaping from prison and attaining her grievous injuries before stowing away in Jeff's truck and later crashing it to avoid a horde of zombies, making her Ax-Crazy Mad Bomber nature very apparent.
    • Axel is introduced with a flashback detailing how the indie film crew he was a part of was killed, and how over many days he trained himself to become a master at throwing hatchets, illustrating both his nature as a highly narcissistic prima donna and his hatchet weapons.
  • Eyes Out of Sight: Cordelia's eyes are almost always obscured by her bangs. On the rare occasion that this isn't the case they are instead hidden by the shadow from her large witch hat.
  • Face Doodling: Jules and BOSS can be seen drawing amusing images on a passed-out Luis' face in the True Ending.
  • Facial Horror: Crawlers in The Attic do not have any skin left on their faces, as shown once you kill them and blow off their masks.
  • Fetus Terrible: The Nataleviathan, a boss encountered in the attic, is the spawn of an Eldritch Abomination called The Leviathan and the Mors Mundi cult found a way to hatch it. Good news: it didn't develop in time and the potentially god-like being is now an oversized mix between a stillborn fetus and a shrimp. Bad news: it can still cause room-wide shockwaves and spew acid all over the place.
  • Fission Mailed: A very real-looking error message pops up on your computer when you pick up the boss key in the Old Set...but it's not. RUNRUNRUNRUNRUNRUNRUNRUNRUNRUNRUN
  • Flawed Prototype: The Laboratory features unfinished and much weaker versions of Chunks that can actually be killed. In addition, the mysterious prism-shaped objects that teleport the player's character back to the start of the level are less-advanced versions of the device that opens the portal to the EXIT Realm.
  • Floating Mask: Groups of floating masks in the Foresaken Crypt will rapidly circle around the player whilst slowly drawing closer to them.
  • Fragile Speedster: Mumba has the fastest agility in the game coupled with the lowest base health.
  • Freeze-Frame Bonus: Several characters' introductory cutscenes have visual gags that only appear for a few seconds.
  • Friendly Shopkeeper: Cordelia the witch is an amicable, if flirty, seller of goods. Her mother Roselia even better exemplifies this trope, practically punctuating the end of every sentence with "honey". Inverted with Cybil the cultist shopkeeper, who sternly says that you had better buy something.
  • Fun with Acronyms: The big glaring sign that says "EXIT" on it isn't actually a way out of the Estate; it's a label for the room containing the device that opens a portal to another dimension designated "Realm 3X1T" (Three-X-One-T), which is home to a whole bevy of monsters and also Diavola.
  • Genre Throwback: The game is a love letter to '90s horror of all stripes, whether it be VHS B-movies or early Survival Horror games, especially Resident Evil and Parasite Eve (1998).
  • Ghost Ship: The Sunken Ship level takes place on a sunken ship located inside the mansion somehow.
  • Glitch Entity: The boss of the Old Set. It pretends to crash your game, then chases you down with an unkillable Chunks made of blindingly bright TV static. Finally, it's undamageable in its boss fight proper, so you have to avoid its attacks until it displaces itself into smaller pieces you can destroy.
  • Graphics-Induced Super-Deformed: Since all the characters' sprites are small and boxy, they look much less defined than their realistically-proportioned character designs that appear in cutscenes. For example, Fuji and Cordelia's sprites are the same height even though Fuji is considerably taller than her. The only exception to this is Mumba, who was already a chibified character without much definition to begin with.
  • Group Picture Ending: A picture was apparently taken by a Mors Mundi cultist of all the characters celebrating around a campfire after the events of the True Ending. You get to see this campfire party in person after clearing an Awakening run while having Over 100% Completion.
  • Hair-Raising Hare: Pink fleshy rabbits called Facelesses appear in the Attic Sanctum and make use of holes in the floor to travel around the room.
  • Halfway Plot Switch: After getting the Normal Ending with Cordelia, the plot is no longer about escaping the monster-filled estate and is instead about helping Cordelia to rescue her father from the EXIT realm.
  • Harder Than Hard: X Must Die. All of the previous difficulties' stipulations apply, you have no map, the stores and treasure rooms are hidden, enemies are tougher and Chunks spawns in almost immediately and has a LOT more health, forcing you to either fight your way through every room while he's chasing you down or knock him out early, which is a time-consuming and dangerous process. Oh, and you may now have to run away from more than just one Portrait Demon this time!
  • Haunted House: The majority of the game takes place inside the Valentine family mansion at 666 Hamlin Street, which has become overrun with monsters and demonic entities as well as having spacetime within it warped to the point that it countains hundreds if not thousands of rooms.
  • Have a Nice Death: Each time you die, you'll be greeted with a different sinister or humorous message.

    NICE TRY BUD.

  • Horror Doesn't Settle for Simple Tuesday: Most of the game's events take place on Halloween night (coinciding with how the original version, Dead Estate Classic, was released then), not that you would really be able to tell without going out of your way to find small details.
  • Intimidating Revenue Service:
    • The Eviction Notice, an old piece of paper from Roselia's less responsible days that can scare off the enemies from the room in an instant once you kill a foe. Even undead freaks, eldritch horrors, twisted experiments and murderous maniacs seem to fear the mere possibility of you being a representative of the taxman!
    • The Tax Forms. It drains away your money while you are in combat, but it gives you plenty of extra damage the more money you have.
  • Invincible Boogeymen:
    • Downplayed with Chunks. He's capable of being knocked out on each floor, which prevents him from chasing the player and nets them a cash bonus. However, especially on harder difficulties, this quickly becomes impractical depending on the situation, so it still might be the better choice to run to avoid losing health.
    • The Portrait Demon, however, is totally unkillable and invincible, and will reduce your HP to 1 if it touches you. Just run if you see its creepy face coming your way.
  • Joke Item: Despite being heavily overpriced at $500, Fake Poo simply replaces your weapon's firing sound effect with a fart. The description just reads "hehe".
  • Kill Enemies to Open: The doors out of a room with enemies in it lock until you clear out all the monsters, unless more monsters happen to spawn in after you've already cleared it once (e.g. a Wormy emerges from a broken pot or a burning enemy falls from the ceiling). This is normally pretty standard, but it becomes stressful if you become trapped in a room with Chunks because of it.
  • Killer Gorilla: In the Awakening Ending and Sequel Hook, it seems that Cybil has managed to get a mutated chimpanzee as a servant in order to kidnap Albert.
  • Last Chance Hit Point: The Chrysus Medallion and "Second Chance?" items. The former lets you stay alive at 0 HP while rapidly draining your money and killing you when you run out, while the latter causes an explosion around you when you get hit at 1 HP and saves you from death if you kill something with the explosion.
  • Macrogame: Chunks Medallions, awarded for completing a run with the amount dependent on the difficulty. They can be used at Filia and Faith's shops to buy curses and blessings on a looped run.
  • Mad Bomber: BOSS's playstyle revolves around this. She explodes upon taking damage and starts with the item that allows her to tank a fatal hit if she kills someone with the explosion it causes, as well as having sticky bombs. She apparently broke out of prison by blowing up half of the prison wall, which left her with some hefty injuries as a consequence.
  • Made of Explodium: The Beating Bomb item can potentially cause any enemy to explode on death — even Chunks and Diavola.
  • Madwoman in the Attic: Floor 3 features Axxons, disgusting monsters that resemble humanoid women with far-too-long necks that get enraged and spew blood from their eye sockets when hurt. It's likely not a coincidence that this floor is the Attic Sanctum and is styled after an old attic filled with junk.
  • Maneki Neko: Chisai, the boss of the Shrine, is a gigantic lucky cat sculpture that attacks you with powerful Shockwave Stomps and inhibits your movement with its small soot-sprite minions.
  • Marathon Level: The EXIT Realm. Instead of simply finding the boss key and bringing it to the locked boss room, this level requires three buttons scattered throughout it to be pressed to open the gate to the Sacrificial Grounds, and it's about twice as large as every other floor in the game and filled with difficult enemies. Luckily, it also includes one of every kind of Cordelia's shops, so ambrosia and other items aren't in short supply.
  • Marionette Motion: The mannequins of the Second Story twitch and teleport, rapidly advancing towards the player.
  • Merit Badges for Everything: Digby's backstory is that he had completed all of his merit badges except for one, which was apparently to serve as a lab assistant. He thought that he could complete it by answering an ad that led him to the Dead Estate, where he was abducted by Chunks.
  • Metal Slime: Golden Wormies sometimes spawn in rooms and drop a huge amount of cash upon death. Downplayed in that they can't actually escape the room they're in, but they will try to hide behind pots or bits of furniture while the real threats of the room do the attacking (and some of them will disappear after a few seconds if they're not killed).
  • Miracle Food: Ambrosia fully heals you upon buying it.
  • Mission Control Is Off Its Meds: The loading screen quotes are all over the place, ranging from Captain Obvious suggestions ("kill enemies by shooting at them!") to blatant shilling of other Milkbar Lads games ("Play Bonkers!") to straight-up telling the player "you're going to die" right before Diavola's boss arena.
  • Monster Clown:
    • Pierrot, the boss of the Attic Sanctum, spews damaging tears as he jumps around the room on his ball. Once he's knocked off of it, he'll aimlessly run around the room, crying even more in despair.
    • Pierrot Deux serves as the boss of the Mindscape, and is an even larger, more monstrous clown animated with Claymation rather than spritework.
  • Moth Menace: The moths of the Second Story hover in place until they've locked on to the player, swooping downward to strike them.
  • Ms. Fanservice: Cordelia is quite attractive, and all of her outfits are meant to play it up in different ways. Exaggerated with the various shopkeeper character portaits of her; the higher the level you're on, they get increasingly flirty and pin-uppy, culminating in the Balcony portait, which has her dripping wet from the rain while leaning forward and brushing her hair back.
  • Multiple Endings:
    • Normal Ending: The player's character defeats Chunks and escapes the Estate with Cordelia before it blows up. Cordelia never rescues her father and her childhood home is destroyed.
    • True Ending: Cordelia rescues Albert from the Exit Realm with the help of the player's character. The Estate only sustains some minor structural damage, and everybody celebrates.
    • Awakening Ending: The Leviathan lures the player's character to sleep and then invades their dreams. Defeating it in this dream state prompts a flash-forward to the distant future year of 2004, where a new plan is being hatched by the Mors Mundi cult...
  • Murderous Mannequin: The Second Story is littered with mannequins that unpredictably teleport towards the player.
  • Nepharious Pharaoh: The Forsaken Crypt features the Golden Mask, a giant stylized Egyptian-themed pharaoh statue head, as a boss.
  • New Jobs As The Plot Demands: You'll quickly start noticing that the Merchant, Arms Dealer, Nurse, and Bank Teller all look awfully similiar to one another.
  • No Cutscene Inventory Inertia: Averted. Cordelia's secret cutscene at the end of her Normal Ending route has a unique sprite of her holding a lantern and reading her father's journal for each of her costumes, and both endings have unique sprites and artwork for every costume on every character.
  • No OSHA Compliance: The Laboratory is filled with giant spiked crushers, the only purpose of which can be deigned is to smash anyone standing under them. A canny player can trick Chunks into running under one for an instant kill.
  • Nostalgia Level: Jules' challenge, "Old Grounds", is simply to clear a run of the original Newgrounds version of the gamenote . It's not even that difficult or challenging, but long-time followers of Dead Estate will be pleased to see the Monster Maker machine at the end of the game again.
  • Number of the Beast: As seen in Digby's intro cinematic, the Estate's address is 666 Hamlin Street.
  • One Stat to Rule Them All: Strength. Increasing damage early on makes the game a lot less punishing, so it's vital that the player increases it a couple times in the guaranteed Doctor's Office on the Ground Floor. Health isn't as big of an issue, since there are numerous items which increase your max health, and agility is only worth purchasing on characters like Jeff and Fuji who are slower at the start, since too much agility increases the likelihood of accidentally running into spikes and actually makes Chunks faster to compensate for your greater speed.
  • Orwellian Retcon:
    • BOSS and Axel were retroactively added into the game's Evolving Title Screen and the True Ending's credits after they were introduced in their respective updates.
    • Cordelia's brother Lambert was added into her collage of memories in her introductory flashback starting with the Assignment Anya update.
  • Our Gnomes Are Weirder: The Dark Mood Woods are inhabited with evil hopping garden gnomes. This is also Jeff's unlockable costume.
  • Our Zombies Are Different: Judging from information in Albert's notes, the various creatures known as "zombies" encountered round the Estate are 3X1T entities, meaning they are not traditional zombies in the sense that they're reanimated corpses and like many other creatures now roaming the Estate are merely extradimensional monsters.
  • Over 100% Completion: Achieved by collecting all 200 medals, added in a post-launch update or not. Clearing one final Awakening Route with this achievement unlocked adds an extra-special Thanking the Viewer message to the credits and causes one final secret interactive cutscene to play out of the characters gathered around a campfire after Diavola's defeat, like in the photograph at the start of the credits.

    "Goodnight" Unlock Message: You can uninstall now!note 

  • "Pan Up to the Sky" Ending: The very final secret cutscene shows everyone celebrating Diavola's death and Albert's return to Earth, before the camera pans up to the full moon and the final "Goodnight" achievement is unlocked.
  • People Jars: The Laboratory contains large vats of green liquid that will crack and burst open, releasing the zombies contained within.
  • Point of No Return: A polite version. The Balcony is explicitly called as such, as whatever path you choose next will lock you into whatever ending you're going to get, unless you decide to do a looped run and start back on the Ground Floor.
  • Poltergeist: The ghosts in the Foresaken Crypt will attempt to hit the player by possessing nearby pots and levitating them above you before sending them crashing towards the ground.
  • Post-Defeat Explosion Chain: Both True Final Bosses, Diavola and the Leviathan, disintegrate into a cascade of explosions upon their final defeat.
  • Poverty Food: All of the ramen items give you quite significant buffs, but only when you have less than 100 dollars on you.
  • Power Fist: Some items are based around using fists and they are among the only weapons that Fuji can use outside of her regular hands.
  • Putting the Band Back Together: By 2004, the original ten player characters have migrated all over the United States since 1998 until they are all summoned by a Distress Call back to the Valentine Estate in Michigan.
  • Rainbow Speak: Certain words in various loading screen tips and item descriptions are emphasized with a changed color and shaky letters to make them more distinctive. All Bathroom items have descriptions like this.
  • Rest-and-Resupply Stop:
    • The Balcony contains no enemies and is a simple layout of two rooms flanking a straight path upward to the Dead Estate. One of the rooms is a shop, and the other contains a bunch of money pots and an item and gun chest. This is all designed to let you gear up before heading into any of the game's final series of challenges.
    • At the end of the Awakening Route is the Ruined Estate, a dream facsimile of the Dead Estate that only contains a shop and an elevator leading to the Empty Space, which contains the final boss of the Awakening Route. It also doubles as a Mythology Gag to how the Dead Estate originally served the function of the Balcony and had a shop and item rooms in it in Dead Estate Classic.
  • Rodents of Unusual Size: Chunks is a hulking rat monstrosity that relentlessly pursues the player if they spend too much time on a floor.
  • Rouge Angles of Satin: The Forsaken Crypt used to be misspelled as the "Foresaken" crypt, before it was corrected in the Axe to Grind update.
  • Run or Die:
    • The main threat in this regard, Chunks, is actually capable of being temporarily knocked out for the current floor after he spawns in and starts chasing you, which nets the player a tidy sum of cash. The problem is that this takes quite a bit of firepower, and Chunks isn't just going to stand there and take it, so the player had better be prepared to juke him for a while if they want to take him out. He also gets tougher and tougher the higher the difficulty is, and on anything above Normal he'll mutate into a stronger form after being defeated, so at some point you really should just START RUNNING.
    • Portrait Demons normally only spawn on Looped Runs (or if the current run fulfills some other qualification for them to spawn), and they absolutely must be avoided at all costs because they set your HP to One on touch, which spells disaster especially if they manage to do it in a room with enemies.
  • Sequel Hook: After getting the Awakening Ending for every character along with most medals, Albert is kidnapped again by Cybil and an Evil Counterpart to Chunks years after the events of the game. Chunks, witnessing this, sends out an SOS signal to the others while the Mors Mundi cult are on their way to presumably bring back The Leviathan and start the apocalypse.
  • Shielded Core Boss: Oko, the boss of the Dream, is a sheep who requires you to shear off all of its wool before you're able to damage its actual healthbar, while the sheared wool becomes Homing Projectiles around you before reforming on Oko shorty afterward.
  • Shotguns Are Just Better: Jules sure seems to think so, as her primary weapon is a single-barrel 12-gauge. There are also a variety of other shotguns lying around the estate, ranging from the sawed-off to the auto.
  • Shout-Out: Has its own page.
  • Something for Everyone: Upon looping, each character will see the sparse room with the bedframe in the Upper Story turn into a reflection of their own bedroom. For example, Jules' is her college dorm, BOSS' is her prison cell, Fuji's room is covered in nothing but weights, etc.
  • Signs of the End Times: In 2004, without warning, the stars suddenly go out, a second moon appears in the sky, and both moons turn blood red. Whatever the Mors Mundi cult have done, it can't be good.
  • Smoking Hot Sex: Luis and Lydia spend a night together in 2003 that ends with both of them smoking a cigarette on the top of Luis' RV.
  • The Spook: The boss of the Old Set, the Static Demon, is substantially harder to explain than the other monsters infesting the Estate. While things like giant sentient gobs of flesh and killer clowns can be explained as coming from the EXIT Realm or Dad's experiments, there is nothing that explains the Static Demon's existence or how it's capable of manipulating sprites and nearly crashing the game itself. It all just serves to make the encounter that much scarier.
  • Stalked by the Bell: Chunks does NOT like it if you stay on a single floor for too long.
  • Take That!: The Easy Mode tends to have different names for each playthrough. One of these names is "Game Journo", probably a reference to Dean Takahashi's memetically-infamous turn at Cuphead.
  • The Tease: Cordelia is an incredibly flirtatious and moderately exhibitionistic witch. Almost all of her dialogue has her giggling or softly moaning.

    Cordelia [as the player enters her shop]: ~Well~, if I'd known someone was coming in...

  • Threatening Shark: The submerged sharks in the Sunken Ship charge at you extremely quickly once you're in their sights.
  • Three-Stat System: Health, Strength and Agility. Health determines how many times your character can get hit before dying, Strength linearly increases how much damage they do and Agility increases their base speed. These stats can be upgraded by Cordelia at the Doctor's Office, which spawns guaranteed on the Ground Floor and the Attic Sanctum.
  • True Final Boss: Diavola serves as this and can only be reached by clearing every alternative path and obtaining all four parts of the silver key.
  • Unfortunate Names: There is a gun which very rapidly fires six shots at once. It's called the "Sex Gun". It even has "SEX" spelled out on top of it! Plus, the version which fires radioactive bullets is called the "Rad Sex Gun".
  • Variable Mix: Each floor has a passive and aggressive mix depending on whether or not there are enemies in a room, and switches back to the passive one after they are defeated.
  • The Very Definitely Final Dungeon: The Exit Realm. A ghoulish Eldritch Location full of sand-blasted red rocks and all manner of demonic entities, this realm is the last challenge before the True Final Boss on the True Ending route.
  • Victory Pose: Upon getting the true ending, each character strikes a unique pose referencing JoJo's Bizarre Adventure, except for Gnome Jeff, who is a gnome and cannot articulate his body.
  • Video Game Flame Throwers Suck:
    • Hairspray is essentially a truncated flamethrower, firing only two jets of flame and doing about half as much damage, making it a worse version of an already bad weapon. Lydia starts with it, but can swap it out for the regular flamethrower using one of Filia's curses.
    • The Flamethrower does piddling damage with low accuracy and its only saving grace is that it can set enemies on fire, which is still a decent status effect that can be enhanced with the Demon Lung item. Averted with the Super Flamethrower, which has very good DPS and therefore none of the regular flamethrower's downsides.
  • Warp Zone: The Basement serves as this, with elevators for each of the other rooms, but not the 3X1T Realm. This can give you the opportunity to skip to the end or to go back to the beginning without having to do a looped run in case you don't want to run into stronger enemies, elite cultists or the Portrait Demon.
  • "Where Are They Now?" Epilogue:
    • The True Ending credits play over polaroid snapshots of the various playable characters after the events of the game, such as Jeff and Lydia arm-wrestling Fuji, and Jules, Cordelia and Lydia trying on each other's outfits. The very last photo is of Cordelia and her family holding a welcome back party for Albert.
    • The Awakening Endings expand on this even more, showing what each character gets up to in the six years after the True Ending. Some remain in closer touch with one another and all remain friends, but they begin to drift apart until a mysterious Distress Call summons them all back...
  • Where the Hell Is Springfield?: Downplayed as of the Assignment Anya update, which reveals the Estate is likely located somewhere in Michigan's Northern Lower Peninsula, specifically the Leelanau Peninsula, due to the Mors Mundi cult activity there. Empire is even name-dropped as the town George V. Kostopoulos moved to from Detroit.
  • Witch Classic: Cordelia wears a classic witch hat and travels upon a broomstick (when she isn't playing nurse, banker, doctor or arms dealer.)
  • You Dirty Rat!: Chunks is a rat turned massive by a lab experiment and he will stop at nothing trying to catch you.
  • Youkai: The main enemies of the faux-Japanese Shrine are Yokai-like creatures, including Nurikabes that jump out from walls at you, Tanuki disguised as furniture, Oni that roll giant spiked logs across entire rooms and Umibozus that spit water bubbles at you. There's also an enemy resembling an animate sword called a "Harakiri", which is clearly inspired by Tsukumogami Youkai.

Assignment Anya 

  • Another Side, Another Story: While Axel's intro cinematic shows how he went from indie film actor to Action Survivor, the story of Assignment Anya shows how his co-star Anya managed to escape the Estate after their film crew was attacked.
  • Apocalyptic Log: Anya can find several written by Cordelia scattered across the house, detailing the onset of its gradual overtaking by monsters and cultists from the EXIT Realm.
  • Author Avatar: Parodied. The Milkbar Lads appear in the ending, but as a AAA game studio capable of potentially making a game which sells billions of copies instead of an extremely small indie studio made up of less than ten people.
  • Big Fancy House: This game shows that even before the Exit Realm and the Mors Mundi cult turned the Dead Estate into an Eldritch Location which is vastly Bigger on the Inside, it was still a sprawling mansion with features like a gigantic library and courtyard. And that's only the stuff on the ground floor, as Anya never ascends to the upper stories where Albert's laboratory presumably lies.
  • Call-Forward: One of Cordelia's logs makes note of Luis being Albert's only friend, foreshadowing Luis traveling to the Estate to investigate his friend's disappearance.
  • Company Cross-References: Anya's C rank ending sees her becoming a Burger Fool at Duane Burger (specifically how it's depicted in Ugby Mumba), wearing an outfit that makes her look very similar to Gwen Duane as she appears in that game series as well. Gwen even appears as a cameo in the background.
  • Covers Always Lie: The update promotional artwork depicts Anya amidst zombified versions of all the other player characters. Needless to say, nothing of the sort happens in the actual game.
  • Cutting Off the Branches: The main game's Awakening ending portrays Anya as definitely having been promoted to CEO and president of Milkbar Lads, meaning she received an A rank at the very least.
  • Direct Line to the Author: The ending reveals that Anya's account of what happened during her experience was the direct inspiration for the story of Dead Estate's main game...except several things in Assignment Anya also indicate that the main game happens as normal, so make of that what you will.
  • End-Game Results Screen: Upon completion you're ranked from a grade of C to S based on three categories: How long you took, how many times you healed and how many times you saved.
  • Escape Sequence: The final segment of the game is a frantic escape from Chunks as the entire house begins to burn and furniture starts raining from the ceiling.
  • Family Theme Naming: This game confirms that Cordelia inherited the "-elia" suffix of her name from her mother Roselia, while her brother Lambert shares the name suffix of her father Albert.
  • Five-Second Foreshadowing: On your way to collect the Winter Medallion, you'll hear both Chunks' distinctive thumping sound and his signature growl, keying you in that you'll probably be fleeing from him very shortly. You'll never guess what happens next.
  • Inventory Management Puzzle: Ripped straight of Resident Evil is Anya's inventory system. Anya can only carry a certain number of items at a time (her zombie mask taking up a slot as well), and several puzzles can and do exploit this weakness by requiring her to carry around multiple items across the entire map, meaning you'll likely have to make space by dropping other things in a storage chest and/or coming back later. Luckily, Anya can find small sacks around the mansion to give her increased inventory space, but this only alleviates the problem a bit without fully resolving it.
  • Loophole Abuse: The game keeps track of how many times you heal throughout the game, which affects your ending score and what rank you'll get. However, it only tracks how many health potions you've consumed, meaning the two items in the game which increase your HP by 1 but also heal your HP to full (The Odd Potion and the Champagne Bottle) can be used without hurting your overall score at all. This means you can technically still S rank the game while having two heals available to you if you know where to look.
  • The Mafia: For some reason, one of the reviewers who judge Dead Estate (1998) at the end is called "Mafia Previews" and writes their reviews in the style of The Don.
  • Multiple Endings: The mode has different endings based on your ranking:
    • Bad Ending: Dead Estate (1998) becomes a failure and Anya is forced to work at a burger joint to put herself through college
    • Normal Ending: Dead Estate (1998) is a modest success, and Anya is given a full time position at Milkbar Lads.
    • Good Ending: Dead Estate (1998) is a breakout success, and Anya is promoted to CEO of Milkbar Lads.
    • Best Ending: Dead Estate (1998) becomes a massive success, with Anya becoming a billionaire and eventually President of the USA.
  • Namesake Gag: The CEO of Milkbar Lads in the Dead Estate universe is named Jack Milkbar (not to be confused with Jack, the lead programmer of the real-world Milkbar Lads, although that's clearly who he's based upon).
  • Patrolling Mook: Cult Grunts fulfill this role after Anya acquires two medallions, taking over rooms of the house and surveying rooms with yellow cones of light to indicate their eyes. Stepping into their vision for two long will cause them to summon a horde of Cult Brutes who will chase Anya to the nearest safe room, which can be extremely disadvantageous.
  • Prequel: The events of the mode are set before the events of Dead Estate proper, dropping far more information about the Mors Mundi cult's pact with Diavola, the slow overtaking of the Valentine family's mansion by eldritch monsters and how over time it became the Mobile Maze it is in the main game. The ending shows how Chunks lost his arm to the Cordelia Mimic.
  • Unexpected Gameplay Change: While the base game is a horror-influenced action Roguelike, Assignment Anya is an actual Survival Horror game, completely contrasting in tone to the rest of the game's content.
  • Resolved Noodle Incident: This game shows how Chunks lost his left arm: the Cordelia Mimic bit it off while he was chasing Anya.
  • Self-Deprecation: If Dead Estate (1998) flops commercially, the reviews for the game will trash it for being too difficult, encouraging Save Scumming and making the reviewers uncomfortable due to having too many huge breasts.
  • Shout-Out: See the main game's page.
  • Solve the Soup Cans: Almost exactly like the game series it takes direct inspiration from, many of the doors and chests in Assignment Anya can only be opened by solving a convoluted puzzle. The main overarching one is that Anya must find four medallions representing the seasons in order to open the Courtyard gate and escape the Estate, which all are found in their own unique puzzles in different locations around the house.
  • You Have Researched Breathing: By default, Anya can't jump and has average agility. She needs to find boots and socks that let her jump and move faster respectively.
  • Warp Whistle: By staring into mirrors in certain rooms, Anya can warp to different parts of the map instantaneously.
  • Wham Shot: Upon collecting the Winter Medallion, you'll hear an all-too-familiar growling noise...and then upon entering the next room, Chunks charges in, with both of his arms intact.

I can sense the end is coming, maybe I am onto something
Feel no fear and keep on gunning, there's no sense in ever stumbling
No cold feet, I must keep pressing, on and on and I'm confessing
I know I will find my blessing, know that I will soon be resting!
Soon be resting! (x2)
Oooh...
Soon be resting!