![]() It was my favorite way to play Bloober’s best game until the release of the System Redux edition for next-gen platforms. While the first Layers of Fear ran poorly on the platform, their other Switch game, Observer, ran surprisingly well, often achieving a better framerate than the PS4 version. I was actually curious to see how well Bloober Team would port this game to Nintendo’s system. Layers of Fear 2 walkthrough Hide ads How to unlock the You Cant Handle the Truth achievement DiegoCaldo 806,347 10 0 1 To get this achievement, you must first. Layers of Fear 2 was originally released in 2019 for every single platform but the Switch. The next-gen Layers of Fear will haunt the PS5, Xbox Series X/S, and PCs in June. Clearly not the game’s highlight, even if it’s when it’s at its most tense. Layers of Fear 2 instead goes for the instant gratification of the shock scare right off the bat, rather than the slow, growing sense of. Finally, Layers of Fear 2 sometimes remembers it’s a horror game and randomly forces to run away from an amorphous monster in some bland chase sections. It focuses less on the annoying “ever changing corridor” mechanics from the original Layers of Fear, often resorting to a more linear level structure, with the occasional (and very obvious) puzzle for you to solve, such as unlocking a safe with a combination you had acquired literally in the previous room, or avoiding spotlights in order to reach the end of a corridor. The game’s “narrator” sounds an awful lot like Snoke from Star Wars…Īs a game itself… Layers of Fear 2 is still, by and large, a walking simulator with small doses of puzzle solving sprinkled throughout its duration. Jump scares are still present, but they aren’t as prevalent as before, with the game occasionally managing to pull off some well-deserved scares by combining its excellent (but compressed) binaural audio with a bit of tension and buildup. Once you know how the game will try to subvert your expectations, and how it will try to make you feel unsettled, you’ll basically run on cruise control up until the end of the final act. The game is comprised of five acts, with the first one being by far its most interesting, not because it’s immensely better than the rest of the experience, but because the game hardly changes its plot, puzzles and surprises throughout your entire gameplay. It doesn’t exactly pay off very well in the end, but I have to commend Bloober Team for making Layers of Fear 2‘s plot less dumb than the one from the original. One thing I immediately liked in Layers of Fear 2 over its predecessor is that I did not figure the entire plot out in the first fifteen seconds, with the game managing to hide and unveil its mysteries in a slightly more interesting pace. ![]() It’s still a game about an artist slowly descending into madness, but instead of playing as a painter inside a mansion, you now play as a struggling Hollywood actor from the first half of the 20th century, while being trapped inside the most confusing ship I have ever seen in a game. Layers of Fear 2 isn’t a direct sequel to the original, but follows some similar patterns. ![]() These graphics are quite impressive for a Switch game. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |