The story picks up on the heels of the opening Act, and once again we fall into the dainty feet of the silent (and unnervingly unemotional) protagonist Linda, an Indonesian schoolgirl who falls unwittingly into a school-field-trip-gone-wrong trope. It’s likely it’s no coincidence that playing the latest chapter in the DreadOut series evokes memories of those stellar games of yesterday Fatal Frame/Project Zero, Deadly Premonition, Silent Hill… they’re all echoed here, some more successfully than others. Like its predecessor, DreadOut: Act 2 is an unapologetic love letter to a now bygone era of survival horror, a time of clunky controls and claustrophobic camera angles. There’s an unsophistication about the DreadOut universe that’s at once both endearing and disappointing.
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