Full story
About Little Nightmares III
Little Nightmares III marks a creative handoff in the beloved horror-platformer series, with Supermassive Games taking over development from original creators Tarsier Studios, who exited to work on new properties after their acquisition by Embracer. Bandai Namco publishes once again, preserving the franchise's distinctive creepy-dollhouse aesthetic. The third entry introduces online co-op for two players, a series first, with new protagonists Low and Alone navigating a nightmarish Spiral set of interconnected worlds.
Supermassive, best known for narrative horror like Until Dawn and The Dark Pictures Anthology, brings different DNA to the series while respecting its signature wordless storytelling. Puzzles emphasize cooperation and item exchange between the two children, and the scale of environments grows larger than the previous entries. Asynchronous solo play with an AI companion is also supported for players who prefer a single-player experience.
For longtime fans, the handoff raises questions about whether the magical strangeness Tarsier cultivated can survive the change in studio hands. Supermassive's public reverence for the source material has so far reassured the community.
Overview
Why this games page exists
Supermassive Games takes over the Little Nightmares series for a co-op-focused third entry. A Bandai Namco horror countdown.
Why it matters
It is the first Little Nightmares game from a new studio and the first to support online co-op in the series.
The details
Key highlights
- Developer
- Supermassive Games, published by Bandai Namco Entertainment
- Platforms
- PS5, Xbox Series X/S, PC, Nintendo Switch 2, with last-gen versions likely
- Format
- Side-scrolling puzzle-horror adventure with online and local co-op
- Audience
- Horror fans, puzzle-platformer players, and Little Nightmares veterans
Reading the timer
How to use this games countdown
Little Nightmares III sits inside the games calendar as a horror date that people are likely to check more than once. This page is meant to do more than show a raw countdown number: it keeps the tracked date, source quality, location context, and release confidence in one place so the page stays useful even when the final event details are still tightening.
Right now the key public signal is May 14, 2026, with confirmed status and date confirmed precision. That distinction matters. A confirmed datetime is very different from a month-level or date-only signal, and people planning watch parties, travel, ticketing, launch coverage, or newsroom publishing need that nuance instead of a misleadingly precise timer.
We are tracking Little Nightmares III from Bandai Namco plus the official event source. For this page, that means the safest way to read the countdown is as a reference layer: use the timer for awareness, then use the source, precision, location, and event facts together before you commit to travel, viewing plans, promotional scheduling, or time-sensitive announcements.
The most practical reading of this countdown is: Little Nightmares III is being watched for a globally tracked release or event page, and the current page focus is the main horror milestone rather than every surrounding rumor or speculative date. Type: Sequel. Genre: Horror / Puzzle Platformer.
Little Nightmares III needs game-specific context because launch timing often depends on platform readiness, preload access, editions, and staggered unlock rules. A countdown page is most useful when it reminds players and writers that a “release date” can still hide multiple real moments: embargoes, early access, patch windows, and region-based activation. This page currently tracks type: Sequel, genre: Horror / Puzzle Platformer, platforms: PC, PS5, Xbox Series X|S, Switch. That extra context helps separate Little Nightmares III from other little nightmares, supermassive, horror, co op countdowns that would otherwise look interchangeable.

