Thanks Fantomas!
Ah, the true Life is Strange experience.
tbh that part got me too, especially when i was looking for the optional photos
here are just the characters, if anyone's interested:
Here's one for now. If anyone wants a different one, let me know.Stumbled across these on reddit (OG tumblr source here) and figured they might have some good avatar potential.
Some of her complaints were that the setting was mundane, the supporting cast are lack luster, and that the didn't build on the racism and politics on the first episode.Game Informer gave it a 7/10, just reading the summary it sounds like they enjoyed the first episode more than this one.
So long as it's doing well, I can't blame them. The Pricefield relationship is a big part of what made the original what it was, and people want more of that.heeeey i don't know if it's a good idea or not.
The comic is cool so far,but heeeeeeey...milking a franchise is not a good thing.
How the hell did Episode 4 of Season 1 review so poorly?? I thought it was by far the best episode, a legit 10/10 for me. This is why I never trust critics when it comes to this type of gameSome of her complaints were that the setting was mundane, the supporting cast are lack luster, and that the didn't build on the racism and politics on the first episode.
Life Is Strange 1 reviews at game informer were E1: 8.5, E2: 6.5, E3: 7, E4: 6.5, and E5: 8
Different reviewer, but these scores for the first season were common.
Gamespot were
1: 7
2: 7
3: 8
4: 6
5: 6
IGN
1: 6.5
2: 7
3: 8
4: 6
5: 6.5
How the hell did Episode 4 of Season 1 review so poorly?? I thought it was by far the best episode, a legit 10/10 for me. This is why I never trust critics when it comes to this type of game
Yeah I suppose that makes sense when you look at it through that angle. I was thinking with the benefit of having played them all at the same time, so to me I was never going through those theories in my head, it all just felt like it flowed together.Having gone through some of the episode 4 reviews, it seems there was generally some backlash to how dark the episode is, especially the Rachel reveal, when compared to the first three episodes which were more comfy and light. Some people apparently weren't fond of the puzzle where you put all the pieces together to find the dark room. But it seems the darkness and arguable anticlimax about Rachel's whereabouts annoyed a lot of people. You have to remember that during the first three episodes, there was a sense that anything could happen, and many elaborate theories and ideas emerged. Rachel has superpowers too! Rachel got stuck in an alternate timeline! She got abducted by aliens! A time traveling future Max killed her! She can turn into a deer! But ultimately the reveal is that the most obvious answer turned out to be the correct one. To some, it's a tragic but satisfying way of showing that sometimes we blind ourselves with hope and ignore the obvious, but to others it was an anticlimactic, mundane, and inappropriately dark ending to the game's core mystery.
Yeah, same. There's definitely something to playing it at release vs. post-release.Yeah I suppose that makes sense when you look at it through that angle. I was thinking with the benefit of having played them all at the same time, so to me I was never going through those theories in my head, it all just felt like it flowed together.