Supermassive has clearly worked on honing its craft during the course of The Dark Pictures Anthology series and pretty much every element of The Devil In Me is superior to the previous entries. It’s a great setup, and happily, The Devil In Me makes more of it than any of its predecessors. The crew think they have hit the motherlode but, naturally, proceedings turn dark and murderous: the Murder Castle has a seemingly endless ability to reconfigure itself and they find themselves stalked by their not-so-genial host, resplendent in an H. Holmes artefacts (Holmes was a real person, if you’ve never heard of him before). Recent events have seen the crew losing confidence in Charlie, but their bickering is suspended when a reclusive billionaire obsessed with Holmes invites them to his private island, where he has built a replica of Holmes’ hotel, dubbed the Murder Castle, and stuffed it full of H. This time around, they are pretty well conceived and portrayed: somewhat neurotic sound engineer and general factotum Erin feisty lighting engineer Jamie earnest and overly loyal cameraman Mark sparky presenter Kate and director Charlie who, to put no finer point on it, is a total ass.Ĭharlie is the lone Brit among the Americans and turns out to be the star of the show, unsurprisingly given that he is played by the genius Paul Kaye, on this occasion mainly (but, mercifully, not completely) reining in his comic chops. In classic Dark Pictures style, the TV crew represents the cast of characters that you must attempt to keep alive until the end of the game.
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