Showing posts with label Alan Wake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alan Wake. Show all posts

Wednesday, 26 December 2012

Top Ten Games, 2012 Edition

Another year of video game blogging has come and gone - actually, my first full January-to-December year doing this. Fifty-two weeks in a year and one review per week (skipping last week) means I've played 50 games to completion this year. But wait, that's not quite true - January was indie month at 3 games per week, and I played some games I didn't review, so that puts me well over 60 this year.

Anyway, if you remember my list from last year, the purpose is not to talk about the best games that came out this year. I don't play games soon enough after launch to do that kind of a list. No, this is simply my 10 favourite games I played this year.

And so, with no more ado, and in alphabetical order, here we go!

Saturday, 29 September 2012

Mechanics and Narrative: Horror

Horror games face a tricky conundrum: how do you make the player feel vulnerable and scared - and how do you do it without making the game seem unfair?

The most obvious method is to use darkness. Most people are scared of the dark at some point in their life, and for many people that fear takes a long time to fade. For some, it never does. The reason is simple: we can't see in the dark. Our intelligence and imagination are a weakness here: when we can't see what's there, anything we imagine could be there. For this reason, most horror games put you in the dark and give you a limited source of light - a flashlight or lantern, for example. 

Of course, just because everyone does it doesn't mean that everyone does it well.

Wednesday, 15 August 2012

Alan Wake

Post-Launch Review
Alan Wake
Developer: Remedy Entertainment
Released: May 2010 (XBox 360) / February 2012 (PC)

About

Alan Wake is a third-person shooter and horror game where you play as the titular character, a bestselling novelist on vacation with his wife Alice in the Pacific Northwest town of Bright Falls. Alice disappears under mysterious circumstances, and Alan loses a week's worth of memory. As he searches for answers, he begins to stumble across pages of a manuscript he doesn't remember writing - and all the terrible events and dark horrors of the manuscript start coming true.