Alien Isolation 2 claustrophobic new trailer promises pure terror 12 years after the Xbox 360 survival horror classic
Creative Assembly will have more to share soon
Alien: Isolation 2 received a freaky new Summer Game Fest 2026 trailer with enough rows of marbled Xenomorph teeth to fill each of the 12 years since Creative Assembly's last survival horror game.
The sequel to the heart-thumping, claustrophobic classic Alien: Isolation is currently available to wishlist, and it'll eventually arrive on Xbox, PS5, Nintendo Switch 2, and PC via Steam. Watch the full trailer below.
The pre-alpha footage shown in Alien: Isolation 2's new trailer is soaked in shades of slate gray, dusk blue, and the mandatory, black, nighttime sparkle of a Xenomorph's perverse flesh. A narrator refers to an "expensive" mistake as we're shown a dismal slideshow: chopped, knobby trees eaten by mist, the twisted intestines of a ruined spaceship, and someone's sweating face as their wide eyes seem to scream.
Alien: Isolation 2 apparently follows the original in offering first-person gameplay to make you extra anxious, and its new trailer teases the emergency flares, environmental puzzles, and monsters you can expect while bearing the consequences of your so-called mistake.
That brings us to the trailer's apex, one of the apex predators of horror history – the salivating Xenomorph. The Summer Game Fest trailer gives us just a glimpse at the protective mother, but the glimmer of its teeth burn a deep and horrific impression.
Even better, art director Ana Sopikova describes the creature as an "unkillable, relentless alien," and it'll skulk around the "unsuspecting colony world" Kurosaki Station, which you're tasked with escaping.
"Players will face a desperate struggle to survive," she says cheerfully, "and we cannot wait to show you more."
The game does not yet have a release date.
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Ashley is a Senior Writer at GamesRadar+. She's been a staff writer at Kotaku and Inverse, too, and she's written freelance pieces about horror and women in games for sites like Rolling Stone, Vulture, IGN, and Polygon. When she's not covering gaming news, she's usually working on expanding her doll collection while watching Saw movies one through 11.
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