Beyond The Gates...it hurts because it starts off so well and realized with two brothers inheriting a video store. Their father has been missing for seven months and they have to get rid of the inventory at the store. It's set up like a drama and you grow a connection to the brothers Gordon (Graham Skipper) and John (Chase Williamson) with Gordon's girlfriend Margot (Brea Grant) making a trio. Gordon is uptight, John is care-free, it's a trope that launched a ton of sitcoms.

When we do have some realizations about the game being super-natural and some moments of blood shed going up on screen, it hurts even more as they're all too fleeting. Head explosions and guts getting ripped out are in there, there just aren't enough moments of them.
Wojciech Golczewski's synth score with the addition of the opening credits showing the process of inside a VCR only make it worse that the film is only on the surface and 80's horror like film. Forget nostalgia, it's only a gimmick to get you into the film. This is the debut feature film from dir. Jackson Stewart and it shows.
What made the film a bit of a delight though for me was the use of real LA locations, such as Eddie Brant's Saturday Matinee as the the video store used in the film and Bearded Lady Vintage & Oddities used as an occult store with a very spooky shopkeeper, Jesse Merlin, who you may now around LA from his performances in Re-Animator: The Musical. The cast including Merlin didn't do anything wrong, they just didn't get murdered as much as people wanted.
Still would have liked to play the VCR board game itself. An idea that could have been better if Sam Raimi type was at the helm.