Survival horror often uses the occult as a catalyst for the plot, but it rarely does the same with more formal religions. If there's one thing that makes people take notice of Cursed Mountain, it would be the story. There are a few fights with special stipulations, such as you constantly losing health until the area seals are broken, but it keeps the experience tense and fresh. The experience does get a bit old when you simply want to get from point A to point B. Unlike other survival horror games, which let you flee from most of your adversaries, Cursed Mountain will often corner you when enemies appear.
The combat is another fairly unique element, as you are often forced into combat. You can get a small sliver of health when performing certain purification rituals on enemies and again if you stand still when you have barely enough health to survive one more hit. Healing can only be done at special shrines, will become invaluable havens, but only if you have incense sticks available. Unlike other games, you cannot use your health-based items as you please. There are some differences, though, mostly in the health management and fighting sections. In a way, this plays out more like the early Silent Hill games, where combat might not have been frequent but was rarely distance-based. It's played from the third-person perspective, you solve a few puzzles that don't require too much out-of-the-box thinking and solutions, and you rely mostly on melee attacks to defeat your enemies, though a few projectile-based attacks exist in your arsenal. In general, the gameplay is similar to many other games in the genre. As Eric Simmons, an experienced mountain climber, your job is to find the whereabouts of your missing brother, solve the mystery behind the artifact he sought, and why entire villages around the holy mountain are dying. However, one of the climbers has disappeared, and the rest of the party has either fled in terror or died. In the 1980s, an expedition team was sent to the Himalayan mountains to recover an artifact from the Chomolonzo mountain. If there's at least one thing that will make players turn their attention to the game, it would certainly be the plot, which feels familiar but has a unique atmosphere. Unlike other original survival horror games on the console, this one is quite good, albeit a bit flawed. Luckily, the team at Deep Silver had the idea of bringing something fresh to Wii gamers, and the result is Cursed Mountain. When the best original horror game on the console is Calling, you know that someone has to fill the void for players who are craving something new instead of something familiar. Interestingly enough, all of the good Wii titles seem to come from game series that started their life on another console family. The Wii has been no exception to this rule, having seen a balance of both good and bad titles in the genre. Some Game Trainers are sometimes reported to be a Virus or Trojan, the most common is a keylogger called HotKeysHook or the file has been packed/protected with VMProtect or Themida and is recognized as Win32/Packed.VMProtect or Win32/ survival horror genre has graced just about every console imaginable in the last three gaming generations.
In most cases using a No-CD or Fixed EXE will solve this problem! Some original games do not work when a certain application has been installed, like DAEMON Tools.When using Fixed Files make sure to use a Firewall which controls outgoing traffic, as some games call back to report the use of these modified files!.When this happens use the original EXE to play online, else you could find yourself banned from the game! Some No-CD/Fixed EXE files work fine in Single Player mode but are detected to be modified when trying to play online.