The Florist Brings Classic Fixed-Camera Survival Horror to BitSummit PUNCH
The Florist stands out in the crowded indie horror space by deliberately reviving fixed-camera tank controls-a design choice most modern horror games have abandoned-while wrapping it in a lush, flower-themed visual identity that subverts the genre's usual grimy palette.
Reporting from 1 sources: Game Spark.
New Zealand developer Phil Larsen showed his survival horror game The Florist at the BitSummit PUNCH indie game festival in Kyoto, held May 22-24, 2026. The game uses a fixed-camera system reminiscent of early Resident Evil titles, with tank controls that force the player to navigate a decaying mansion overgrown with colorful flowers. The player character Claire, a florist by trade, wakes up in the ruined building and must solve environmental puzzles to escape. The demo ended with a surprise chase sequence: a plant-covered monster resembling a Clicker from The Last of Us sprinted at Claire from behind just as she reached the exit. Larsen said the game draws inspiration from Resident Evil, Silent Hill, The Last of Us, the film Annihilation, and the anime Jigokuraku. Claire is unarmed in the opening but will gain access to pistols, shotguns, and poison mixtures she can craft as a florist. The Florist is planned for release on PC via Steam, PlayStation 5, and Nintendo Switch 2.
The Florist director Phil Larsen told Game Spark that the fixed-camera system was chosen because it lets the team control the ideal camera angle for each scene, creating a deliberate visual composition that modern third-person cameras cannot guarantee. Larsen acknowledged the retro feel but said the game layers modern action and presentation on top of that foundation to keep the experience fresh.
The demo's flower gimmick extended beyond decoration: at one point Claire had to use a herbicide-like item to wilt a patch of blue flowers blocking her path, reducing them to dust so she could proceed. Larsen confirmed that the full game will include more such botanical puzzles, with poison mixtures Claire can craft from her florist knowledge serving as both puzzle tools and weapons.
Larsen cited the 2018 film Annihilation and the manga/anime Jigokuraku as major inspirations alongside the obvious survival-horror touchstones. The monster that appears in the demo's final seconds is covered in plant growth, visually tying the creature design to the game's central floral theme. The Florist is targeting PC, PS5, and Nintendo Switch 2, though no release window has been announced.
Synthesized by Yomimono from the 1 cited source below, including Japanese-language reporting where cited, then editorially reviewed before publishing.