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Your purchase of Dreamfall Chapters includes all five episodes.
Dreamfall Chapters is the highly anticipated Kickstarted-funded follow-up to award-winning adventure games The Longest Journey and Dreamfall: The Longest Journey.
Dreamfall Chapters is an...
Your purchase of Dreamfall Chapters includes all five episodes.
Dreamfall Chapters is the highly anticipated Kickstarted-funded follow-up to award-winning adventure games The Longest Journey and Dreamfall: The Longest Journey.
Dreamfall Chapters is an episodic, story-driven adventure game about choices and consequences, dreams and reality, magic and science, chaos and order, and the broken heroes whose actions will shape the course of history in all worlds.
Revisiting familiar locations and characters, and introducing new sights and sounds, new faces, new game mechanics, new thrills and challenges, Dreamfall Chapters takes players on an epic journey — from the dystopian cyberpunk future of Stark, through the mysterious and dreamlike Storytime, to the magical landscapes of Arcadia.
In a story about faith and hope and change, about the choices we make and the people we are destined to become, players will explore these fantastic worlds and mature themes through the eyes of three playable characters.
The complete story — remastered, reworked, recut
Improved art, including redesigned character models, updated lighting and special effects
Enhanced audio, featuring an expanded soundtrack, remastered dialogue and revamped sound design
Brand new special features, containing playable deleted scenes, a concept art gallery and character profiles
Please be advised that Windows 10 operating system will receive frequent hardware driver and software updates following its release; this may affect game compatibility
推荐系统配置:
Please be advised that Windows 10 operating system will receive frequent hardware driver and software updates following its release; this may affect game compatibility
Dreamfall Chapters is about ambiance, it's about full immersion into the game world. There are small details everywhere. You could just get a walk in the area, or advance into the game story.
It's a game about choices. It's a game that lets your imagination run wild.
The music is gorgeous, the color palette is beautiful.
I played the game on a Amd Athlon II X2 with a Radeon HD5500 (smooth), and on a low-end laptop Intel i3 with HD3000 card. (playable). GNU/Linux version is quite polished.
I don't understand people comparing it to TLJ. .... Dreamfall Chapters stands on its own.
Another unity-dinput ignorance case. "Full controller support" is just a lie if dinput controllers not working correctly. (See Layers of Fear or Syberia 3 as good examples.)
I was a big fan of the previous games and excited to play this, but there are a few things preventing me from giving it 5 stars, and if there were an amount between 3 and 4 applicable, I'd probably waste another 10 minutes deciding where to place something as complex as art on this linear scale.
Gameplay:
Plays much more like a telltale game in so far as that all the puzzles are trivial, and it is more about the story and your choices. The main characters are done well, and the writing is often exceptional.
It can feel REALLY slow/pointless occasionally. You won't be feeling like you ever need to figure anything out. The consequences of actions are good. You're not punished for being pragmatic.
Atmosphere/Voice Acting/Visuals/etc:
Really good. As good as before. Definitely felt drawn back into the universe. Especially in Zoe's city.
Gripes:
I include this section to single out some of the most infuriating parts of this game. I'd 100% recommend getting it otherwise.
Parts feel overtly shoe-horned and irritating. Possibly due to the kickstarter backers? Unsure, but it has a similar immersion-breaking feel as can happen with some kickstarters.
There is this particular busker which seriously felt like one of the devs jammed it in just to hear his garbage voice which he thought sounded uber-deep and sensitive. The radius at which you can hear him is ridiculous and sound falls off way too sharply. The microphone it was recorded with doesn't suit the outdoor location. Each time passing him, the escapism which this series excels at is lost.
Some political themes seem to make ridiculous assumptions, too ridiculous to not feel like a shoe-horned bias.
Some characters feel completely inconsequential in a "Let's just put them in so we can have an X in it"-way. And it's nothing to do with the fact they are X, but more like "I have no emotional attachment to this character at all, but apparently the game expects me to." Regardless of the character's alignment.
Full disclosure: I'm not that far into the game. With that said, this is actually what drove me to write this review. The voice work (at least the English voice work) is outstanding, particularly from Charlotte Ritchie, who plays Zoë. To me, she was instantly likeable, charming and relatable. Down to earth but with a foundation of strength. Wherever else the game goes -- and that seems to be good places, from what I can tell so far -- the characters are what drive any great story, and these characters are great. Cheers.