8AM: The Subway

8AM: The Subway

Can my PC run 8AM: The Subway

Find out whether your PC can run this game by reviewing the minimum and recommended requirements below.

RAM 8 GB+ Storage 5 GB+ Windows 10 (64 Bits)

Game Details

Languages
English، Languages With Full Audio Support
Genre
Action، Casual، Indie
Category
Single-player، Steam Achievements، Family Sharing
Developer
David Gallardo
Publisher
HeadArrow

Minimum Requirements

CPU
AMD FX-8320 / 8320
GPU
MSI Radeon R7 200 Series / AMD Radeon R9 200 Series / 200
RAM
8 GB
Storage
5 GB
OS
Windows 10 (64 Bits)

Recommended Requirements

CPU
AMD Ryzen 5 3600 / 3600
GPU
RTX 2060 / NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 SUPER / 2060 / upper
RAM
16 GB
Storage
5 GB
OS
Windows 10 (64 Bits)

Game Description

"8AM: The Subway" confines the player to a silent underground station long past its final departure. The tunnels breathe cold air, the fluorescent lights flicker weakly, and the rhythmic hum of the tracks fades into static. From your surveillance booth, dozens of cameras feed grainy footage of deserted platforms — empty benches, motionless trains, and movements that shouldn’t exist beneath the city.

You monitor the monitors, switching between angles of dark corridors and dimly lit carriages. A shadow stands by the vending machine, vanishes when you switch views, then reappears closer — always closer. Somewhere in the distance, a train horn sounds, though none are scheduled to run. Your orders are clear: observe until 8:00 a.m., report anomalies, and stay inside the booth.

But as the night deepens, the recordings distort. Cameras show passengers that aren’t there. A train arrives without headlights, doors opening to reveal only darkness. Footsteps echo across the tunnels with no visible source. Sometimes, a reflection appears in the booth’s glass — not your own.

Patterns emerge. A figure paces along the same platform every hour. Emergency lights flash in perfect rhythm with your heartbeat. The line between exhaustion and reality blurs as you question whether the system is malfunctioning — or if something beneath the city has begun to wake.

Your job is simple: decide what is real. Each hour tests your perception and nerve as the quiet hum of the subway transforms into something alive, aware, and watching you back.

When dawn approaches, the tunnels fall silent again — but one of the monitors flickers on. It shows the booth, your booth, with someone else already sitting there, waiting for 8:00 a.m.

"8AM: The Subway" is a psychological surveillance horror about fatigue, isolation, and the dread of routine breaking down. In the mechanical heartbeat of the city, it forces you to confront not only what you see — but what sees you.