The Dark Pictures Anthology: Little Hope (Xbox One/Xbox Series X|S)
The Dark Pictures Anthology: Little Hope (Xbox One/Xbox Series X|S)
Tutto il mondo – compatibile con tutte le regioni
Impossibile caricare la disponibilità di ritiro
- Durante l'orario di lavoro, il prodotto viene consegnato entro 30 minuti.
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- Compatibile solo con le console Xbox – non disponibile su PC.
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Game description:
The Dark Pictures Anthology: Little Hope is a 2020 video game developed by Supermassive Games and published by Bandai Namco Entertainment. It is the second game of the first season of The Dark Pictures Anthology. Little Hope serves as the sequel to the anthology's season premiere, Man of Medan. Will Poulter stars as the game's leading actor and plays the role of one of the protagonists, named Andrew. Set in the fictional eponymous town, located in Massachusetts, the game follows four college students chaperoned by their professor. After their bus crashes by the area, the group finds themselves trapped within Little Hope by an impenetrable fog.
Gameplay:
The Dark Pictures Anthology: Little Hope is a video game played from a third-person perspective in which the player assumes control of five characters who are trapped in a ghost town of Little Hope. The player needs to choose different dialogue options, which will influence the course of the narrative and the relationships between the protagonists. The game can be played multiple times, as there are multiple endings and multiple scenarios based on the decisions that the players make. Depending on the choices of the players, some or all characters may or may not die by the end of the story.
Game review:
Little Hope tells a mostly one-note story with underdeveloped characters, and even a fun co-op mode can’t inject enough life to fix that. There weren’t enough meaningful consequences to the choices I made to inspire further digging into its box of tricks, which made additional playthroughs tough going, and the more generous amount of time you have to react to quick-time events deprived me of any gory deaths. A gorgeous setting and some genuinely frantic monster sequences save it from being a complete disaster, but this still feels like a step backward from the heights of interactive horror stories. Hopefully, the next entry in the Dark Pictures Anthology will have interesting characters with much more to say and do, as Little Hope’s predecessors have proven Supermassive can deliver.
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