Follow TV Tropes

Reviews VideoGame / Alan Wake

Go To

TeraChimera Since: Oct, 2010
06/07/2012 10:21:00 •••

American Nightmare: A Different Kind of Monster

Don't go into Alan Wake's American Nightmare expecting the same kind of experience from the first game. As a downloadable title, the style has shifted from story-driven to action and pulpy. One of the best parts of the original game was its story, so this is a bit regrettable, but it's very good in accomplishing its action focus. With several new enemies and a horde of new guns, American Nightmare blows the first out of the water in terms of variety. The presentation in this game is amazingly high-quality for a downloadable game, feeling on par with the original at times, and the campaign isn't much shorter. The linear levels from the first game have been replaced with pseudo-free-roam ones, so now the compass can actually do something besides keep you from backtracking. As part of the shift to increased action, the story is a little lackluster; it gets the job done, but it isn't something that will stay with you for a while. Mr. Scratch, on the other hand, makes for an excellent psychotic, and is a standout villain.

It might've been because I was playing on Normal, but the campaign feels a bit too easy. Taken rarely come at you in collections of more than three or four outside of a few setpieces, and the game practically throws ammo at you. You rarely need to worry about running out of bullets, and so you can use the more powerful weapons a lot more often than otherwise. When you get a gun like the combat shotgun, the game basically becomes a cakewalk.

The "Fight 'Till Dawn" arcade mode, where you have to survive for ten minutes against consistently larger waves of enemies, fits in with the game surprisingly well. The maps are sufficiently spooky, and the game is quiet enough for you to hear the Taken's footsteps. Due to the increased number of enemies, the difficulty in this mode spikes up a bit, and is all but impossible if you haven't unlocked some of the better weapons. As the waves get larger strategic thinking is required to stay alive, and the last minute on these maps are some of the most hectic times I've had in video games.

If you want a meaty continuation of Alan's story, you might want to pass on this game. However, if you just want to see Alan again in a slightly different context and maybe see some new ideas, pick American Nightmare up. For a game this good, fifteen dollars is an awesome bargain.


Leave a Comment:

Top