The Walking Dead: The Complete First Season - Xbox One

Also known as: The Walking Dead: The Complete First Season

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The Walking Dead: The Complete First Season (Xbox One)
Also for: PS4, PC, PS3, Xbox 360
Viewed: 3D Third-person, over the shoulder Genre:
Compilation
Adventure: Point and Click
Media: Blu-Ray Arcade origin:No
Developer: Telltale Games Soft. Co.: Telltale Games
Publishers: Avanquest (GB)
Released: 31 Oct 2014 (GB)
Ratings: PEGI 18+
No Accessories: No accessories

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Summary

Telltale games is credited with trying to single-handedly pull the point and click adventure genre back into the limelight, and The Walking Dead is arguably its crowning achievement to date.

The game is based on the cult-favourite comic The Walking Dead - which has also been made into a hit TV show - and drops you into the aftermath of a zombie uprising. You play as Lee Everett, an unfamiliar character in this world gone to hell. You start in the back of a police car where the driver opens up enough to tell you that he doesn't believe you're a criminal. Of course, from this slow start... well, you know everything's going to start going wrong.

Once you leave that police car characters are introduced thick and fast. Some seem like important characters to your adventure only for them to be eaten up by the undead, while some start to develop.

What's important though is that the story is constantly surprising. You find yourself second guessing characters and taking sides. You make decisions that might come back and bite you on the arse like a zombie chasing you up a ladder. Nothing is clear cut, just like both the TV Show and comics that brought the series its fame.

Some have described this game as a point and click adventure and that's not too far from the truth. Even in the console versions there is a curser on screen during game time. However, it never falls into the same old traps we're used to when playing point and click games. It feels more like Heavy Rain than Broken Sword. There's a lot of time spent being a viewer rather than a player but it never gets dull. There are no perplexing puzzles to crack, there's no aimless wandering. It's incredibly well directed and will keep you playing through long sessions.