Alone in the Dark (Xbox 360)

Release Date: 20/06/2008

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SummaryProduct Details

Central Park is hiding a secret. Built as a safe haven not only for the people of New York, but for something else entirely, generations of guardians have long protected the truth, preserving the vast parkland while the most expensive city in the world reached skyward on its fringes. Now the truth can no longer be contained, and paranormal investigator Edward Carnby finds himself inexplicably cast into the eye of the storm as over the course of one apocalyptic night he must uncover the earth-shattering secret behind Central Park. New York will never be the same again.

  • Developer: Eden Games
  • Publisher: Atari
ReviewsPreviewsInterviews

Game Reviews

You Carnby Serious!

It's strange for the series that created the Survival Horror genre, but Alone in the Dark, much like its amnesiac main character, is searching for identity. Seven years after The New Nightmare, Eden Games have gone to great lengths to ensure this franchise rebirth stands out from anything else on the market.

Resident Evil 4 raised the bar for Survival Horror, but also threw out exploration and puzzles in favour of linear progress, over-the-shoulder shooting and adrenaline-pumping set pieces. Alone in the Dark copies the third-person camera at certain points, shifts to old-style fixed views at others, retains traditional Survival Horror hallmarks of puzzles and exploration, and does its shooting a little differently through a first-person viewpoint.

Conflicted

In the broader strokes of the Action Adventure genre meanwhile, you have Assassin's Creed, which received criticism for simplifying control, to the point where the game almost played itself. Alone in the Dark is the anti Assassin's Creed, bamboozling with a wealth of impressive gameplay interactions and real depth, but via an ungainly control scheme that takes some getting used to.

Constantly at conflict between ambition and execution. There are some thrillingly innovative ideas, but the reality will surprise and frustrate.

Resultantly, Alone in the Dark is constantly at conflict between ambition and execution. There are some thrillingly innovative ideas here, alluding to a developer with its own distinct direction for Survival Horror, but the reality will surprise and frustrate in equal measures.

At its height, Alone in the Dark is the most original, open-to-interpretation take on the genre. Physics, fire, intuitive inventory and common sense combine to make Alone in the Dark the thinking man's Survival Horror, a world away from the run-and gun of Resi 4; protagonist Edward Carnby the MacGyver to Leon S. Kennedy's more straightforward action hero.

You ooze, you lose

Early in Alone in the Dark you're faced with passing an oil-like ooze which sucks you into the floor. It's repelled by light, so you're advised to use your torch. Finding the battery depleted – potentially a gamebreaker in other titles – you'll soon adapt, setting aflame and carrying wooden palettes as a makeshift light source.

The same real-world smarts go for smashing doors with fire extinguishers, counter weighting a see-sawing bus with corpses at one end so you can reach the driver's door, and fashioning explosives with a handkerchief and gasoline bottle, or a flamethrower with a lighter and aerosol. The latter are improvised in Alone in the Dark's inventory, seeing Carnby look into his jacket for stored items; far more immersive than any pause menu.

Visually it's a next-gen spectacle; aurally it's evocative and impacting; and the sheer scope of the gameworld is breathtaking.

But also more frustrating. Alone in the Dark's inventory and healing are accessed in real-time, which is more realistic, and presumably done to heighten tension, but it damages gameplay. Enemies can only be dispatched using fire, so you'll frantically fumble around in first-person creating a petrol bomb or fire bullets while taking damage – meaning more standing still while you spray or bandage yourself up. A shortcut system helps, but it still leads to lots of unwanted deaths. Not fun.

Alone in the Dark also insists on switching up viewpoints and interactions at every opportunity, to the detriment of control. Third-person movement lacks a fully controlled 3D cam and feels cumbersome; swinging weapons with the right analogue stick is rigid; cars handle like hovercraft; and why first-person shooting was favoured over Resi 4 style third-person aiming we'll never know.

Inspired but flawed

It's a shame, because Alone in the Dark is a game of such enormous aspirations. Visually it's up there with MGS4 as a next-gen spectacle; aurally it's evocative and impacting; the sheer scope of the Central Park gameworld is breathtaking; and the episodic structure, DVD-style Chapter Select and TV-style catchups will have you wanting to see the demonic story through to its gripping conclusion.

A game we dearly want to love, Alone in the Dark sadly falls short of greatness. Innovative yet irritating, inspired but flawed, its contradicted nature promises a brave new direction for Survival Horror that may never come to pass. Not everyone will take to it then, but Alone in the Dark is a release that cerebral gamers and Survival Horror developers alike should certainly take note of.

GAME's Verdict
plus points
  • Enormously ambitious physics and fire propogation, intelligent puzzles and a whopping combination of gamestyles.
  • Innovative DVD-style chapter structure, impressive TV-esque presentation and wonderful next-gen visuals and audio.
  • The sheer scope and detail of the Central Park gameworld is breathtaking.
minus points
  • The combination of gamestyles and constantly changing viewpoints damages the game's controls, which often feel cumbersome.
  • Real time inventory management and healing leads to a LOT of frustrating deaths.
  • Why oh why is there no third-person aiming?

Review by: Mark 'Survivor' Scott
Version Tested: Xbox 360
Review Published: 02.07.08

User Reviews

Matty Wattam posted on 15 Nov 2009
Its a cool game with good graphics but the gameplay wasn't that good. Exspecially selecting your gun and mixing stuff up. Ill want to get tape and ill get the battery accidentally. Do NOT buy!
Craig Pykett posted on 30 Sep 2009
A Very good game with some very bad flaws. I've never been a big Alone in the Dark fan, But after completing dead space - Resident evil 5 - Silent hill homecoming I really needed a new horror fix. So i picked this up from my local game store for £7.99. The game is very atmospheric and really breathes life into a franchise on the slump. I'll do through the pro's first - Good gfx, very sleek and polished overall. The voice acting is good considering todays lack of decent voice actors. The chapter select option is pure genius and really add's to the production value, You feel like your watching a high budget series like 24 when the game says ''previously on alone in the dark''. The chapter also lets you skip certain points of the game you cant overcome, so if your just in for the storyline then this really helps. Now for the Cons - The controls are just broken, Its stuck in the resident evil 1 era which really makes basic walking and combat a chore. I'm also not to keen on the loadin
Jamie Ratcliffe posted on 29 Jul 2009
This is, put simply, an interesting game. As noted by so many, this game is indeed finnicky (sp?) with the controls - sometimes they'll be your best friend, other times... your worst enemy, aside from the real enemies of course. The enemies themselves are exceptionally weird, freaky and quite astonishingly 'easy' to kill... well, to an extent at least. You have several choices really, use fire or use fire... or to mix things up, a fire-based bullet. This game has a LOT to do with fire, and it serves it's purpose extremely well, unfortunately, these things get old. As you progress the game the story becomes very interesting, but also very cumbersome... you'll find yourself asking "why?" and saying "wait... what?" and many of the findings and happenings in this story. When you continue a story you previously saved, you'll be given a 'movie-like' catchup to remind you what is happening, and it seems so fast-paced, then when you're put into the game itself, it just
Ollie Smyth posted on 18 Jul 2009
Good game, BUT it has annoying combat controls and driving sequences. It also gets boring near the end with the evil roots. Other than that it really quite good it has a good story and brilliant puzzles. but dont stop playing it because if you do you wont ever finish it. Really good game but has annoying downsides.
Conner Staplehurst posted on 28 May 2009
This game would be good if it wasn't for the bugs in the game. The combat can also be extreamly annoying and can cause you to lose pace with the game being at the same location over and over again. Once you've lost steam with playing this game its hard to get going again. Another thing that seems to be pointless is the ability to skip parts of the story other then if you just want a broad knoledge of the sotry without playing the game. On the plus side the logic puzzles are amuzing for the short term and the use of fire is quite decent (but not as good as Far Cry 2.) Overall its medioca, however if some of the weak points of the game (such as combat) were redefined it would be a lot better game.
1 - 5 of 27 Reviews

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