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How to use the Sound Recorder in Phasmophobia

Phasmophobia’s Chronicle update added even more spooky sounds and voices for ghosts to make, but what good is that with no audible evidence to sell at the end of a contract? Fortunately, the patch also reworked how the Journal records and reports media, leading to the introduction of a new Phasmophobia tool, the Sound Recorder.

I tinkered with it in my Phasmophobia update preview and found just working up the nerve to stand around in the dark, running toward any hostile noises, to be scary enough. The act of actually sticking around and recording was terrifying. Though like so much of the toolkit, the Sound Recorder can be kind of finicky, but I’ve spent a lot of time messing around with demons in the dark and have some ghostly science to show for it.

How to use the Sound Recorder in Phasmophobia

A dark room in Phasmophobia, only the new Sound Recorder tool is visible in the lower right.

(Image credit: Kinetic Games)

To start, don’t think of the new device as just a voice recorder. Phasmophobia’s latest tool captures all kinds of ghostly noises, including the shrill alarm triggered by EMF 5 events and the chaotic stomping of a ghost hunt.

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