![]() As good as the graphics are, the whole game is built around invisible walls. Unfortunately, the exciting combat system and the brilliantly gruesome world can’t save Alice: Madness Returns from some glaringly annoying issues. Alice is slicing her way through bad guy after bad guy, causing fountains of the red stuff to fly into the air, showering the ground and the walls in the process. It’s this variety and strategy that makes the combat so enjoyable - the gore helps a lot too. But, you may have to strike them with the Pepper Pot first then weaken them with the kitchen knife before finishing them off with the huge Hobby Horse. Initially, you target an enemy and either fire away with a Pepper Pot machine gun or hit them with a huge kitchen knife until the creature is dead. ![]() On paper, the combat sounds incredibly simple but get into it and it becomes brilliantly complex. Thankfully, the game is saved by its fantastic combat system. They’re more of a “flick this switch to open that door which will then allow you to get to that platform where you have to do the same again” and are nothing when compared to puzzles to Castlevania: Lords of Shadow which had some genuine head-scratchers. The same goes for the puzzle aspect of the title it’s fun but not very deep. It was actually a lot of fun but it just disappointed us how shallow this part of the game was and when it’s used so much, it just makes the faults more glaringly obvious. It sounds like this element of the game is incredibly boring but to my surprise, it wasn’t. Sometimes, to add in variety, the game throws in some targets you must shoot to bring up some new platforms but that’s as exciting as it gets. Jumping from toadstool to toadstool or mushroom to mushroom, Alice can pirouette and float her way through Wonderland but it never gets any more complex than that you jump from platform to platform, waiting for the moving ones to align before spinning onto them. At times, the title is a platformer that, whilst failing to bring anything new to the table, is fun to play and is, like most of the game, pleasant to look at. The game’s drive to keep you playing won’t be the tale it weaves and will, instead, be the exciting gameplay that makes you come back for more.Īlice: Madness Returns is a game of three parts and they all fit together seamlessly, delivering a varied experience that can both entertain and frustrate. Whilst the story in Alice: Madness Returns is an interesting one, this is no Heavy Rain. Once there, she meets the Cheshire Cat who tells her that the world of Wonderland has been taken over by an evil force and only Alice can stop it. Alice is suffering from hallucinations of Wonderland and of her parent’s death, soon finding herself back in Wonderland after falling down yet another rabbit hole. Following the death of her parents, Alice finds herself in an orphanage where she is assisted by her psychiatrist. The world is ripe with stunning scenery, inventive level design and the highlight of the title is seeing what exactly the game throws at you next, whether it’s a world made of playing cards or a land consisting of rusting clockwork cogs.Īlice: Madness Returns, surprisingly, follows Alice and her slow descent into lunacy. Wonderland in Alice: Madness Returns is a pleasantly disturbing place to spend the nine or ten hours it will take you to complete the game’s six chapters and is unlike anything that you have ever seen before - that is, unless you played the original on the PC. Out are the talking doorknobs and beautiful vistas of the 1951 Disney classic and in are the rivers of blood and the macabre environments. It’s a game that contains a dark and twisted interpretation of the world of Wonderland, an exciting combat system with a variety of powerful weapons and a platforming aspect that manages to provide a solid system whilst somehow ditching most of the problems found in similar games of the genre. This is American McGee’s Alice: Madness Returns, the next generation sequel to the 2000 PC game Alice. You know this is unlike any other Alice in Wonderland product when you see Alice decapitating enemies in a shower of gore with a foot-long kitchen knife whilst wearing a blood-stained blue and white dress that butterflies fly out of. Reviews // 29th Jul 2011 - 11 years ago // By Adam Woodward Alice: Madness Returns Review
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