Eleven years after the original turned a teen-slasher pastiche into one of PlayStation's most quietly influential games, Sony announced Until Dawn 2 at the June State of Play. It's a standalone PS5 sequel from Firesprite, due 2027, and the setup is a sharp left turn from the snowy lodge that started it.
The new premise
Per the PlayStation Blog, this time "a crew of ghost hunters head to an abandoned tropical island for their TV network-funded debut episode." That's a fully new cast and a new world, ditching the mountain for a found-footage, paranormal-TV framing that fits the genre's current obsessions far better than another cabin-in-the-woods.
Firesprite, the Liverpool studio Sony acquired in 2021, is handling it. Creative director Stu Tilley fronted the reveal post, and the studio confirmed the series' signature "butterfly effect" branching choices return, where small decisions cascade into who lives and dies.
The Stormare card
The nostalgia hook lands with Peter Stormare reprising the enigmatic Dr. Hill, the fourth-wall-bothering psychiatrist who haunted the first game's interstitial sessions. Bringing him back is Sony signaling continuity to the original's audience even as everything else changes, a smart way to keep the brand equity while resetting the story.
Why the timing works
Until Dawn's stock has rarely been higher. The original got a full PS5 remake in 2024, and a film adaptation hit theaters, keeping the name in circulation. Horror is having a sustained moment on PS5, the same State of Play dated Silent Hill: Townfall, Control Resonant, and the unsettling ILL for the back half of 2026.
The honest question
The original worked partly because it was an underdog, a B-movie homage nobody expected to be good. A sequel arrives with expectations the first never carried, and the cinematic-horror lane is more crowded now. Firesprite's last big swing, the divisive The Persistence and the underwhelming reception to other projects, means "made by the studio Sony trusts with this" isn't yet a guarantee.
Still, a found-footage ghost-hunt with branching deaths and Dr. Hill pulling the strings is exactly the kind of culturally legible horror that translates to clips, group playthroughs, and the streaming-era social play the first game accidentally pioneered. 2027 can't come fast enough to see if Firesprite earns the name.

