
In 1990, a shareware adventure game arrived that would charm millions of players worldwide. Hugo’s House of Horrors is a text-parser adventure that combines classic horror movie atmosphere with witty humor and clever puzzles — and the entire trilogy has been released as freeware by its creator.
About Hugo’s House of Horrors

Developed and self-published by David Gray, Hugo’s House of Horrors debuted in 1990 as shareware. Hugo must rescue his girlfriend Penelope from a haunted mansion filled with classic horror movie monsters. The game is entirely free — David Gray released all three Hugo games as freeware from his website.
Gameplay
Hugo’s House of Horrors uses a combined text-parser and icon interface. You type commands like “GET CANDLE” or “OPEN DOOR” while also clicking on items. The mansion is filled with interconnected rooms, each presenting inventory puzzles that require lateral thinking.
The game is accessible to newcomers of the adventure genre while providing genuine challenge. Death is frequent and often comedic — the game knows exactly when to kill Hugo for laughs. Save often.
Why It’s Worth Playing
Hugo’s House of Horrors achieved something remarkable: a one-person shareware game that competed with Sierra’s commercial adventures in terms of charm and playability. The horror theme is handled with a light touch that makes it appropriate for all ages, and the puzzles are fair by the standards of 1990 adventure design.
How to Download Hugo’s House of Horrors
New to DOSBox? Our complete DOSBox setup guide walks you through everything you need. Looking for more classics? Browse our top free DOS games list.
How to Run with DOSBox
- Extract to
C:\HUGO1 - In DOSBox:
mount c c:\hugo1→c: - Run:
HUGO.EXE

