Creative Assembly
Opinion

Sequel announced for "Alien: Isolation": I rejoice and fear

Debora Pape
8.10.2024
Translation: machine translated

"Alien: Isolation" is the game that best captures the atmosphere of the excellent 1979 film "Aliens". Now, surprisingly, a sequel has been announced. I have flashbacks to my own playthrough.

Will ten years be enough to recover from the fears endured in "Alien: Isolation"? And face another ménage à deux with the drooling monster from another world? The developer studio of "Alien: Isolation", Creative Assembly, certainly wants to take the plunge again.

In between the "Total War" games came "Alien: Isolation"

"Alien: Isolation": A love-hate relationship

Blood, sweat and tears - and yet gladly again

As Amanda, I had to learn that being quiet is the trump card and ammunition for the revolver is scarce. It only helps against people anyway, and only if I can hit them with my shaky hands. And if I'm unlucky, the noise attracts the alien to the scene, the creature I affectionately referred to as the "godforsaken spawn of hell". Even today, I sometimes wake up in a cold sweat because I think I heard the alien rumbling around in some ventilation shafts.

And I'll never forget the beeping of the emergency phones that serve as save points. The beeping - my personal ambrosia for the ears - meant that after umpteen attempts in which I ended up as alien fodder, I could finally complete a section. Days before the scheduled "Alien" streams, I was shivering down my spine and yet I gamed through the game including all the DLCs. Simply because it's that good.

"Alien: Isolation" manages to do with just a few noises and a dark corridor what "Resident Evil" and co. can't do with their entire bag of tricks of mutated monsters, disgust and lousy jump-scares: make me wet my pants. That's why I'm looking forward to the sequel to "Isolation" - and dreading it at the same time.

Header image: Creative Assembly

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Feels just as comfortable in front of a gaming PC as she does in a hammock in the garden. Likes the Roman Empire, container ships and science fiction books. Focuses mostly on unearthing news stories about IT and smart products.


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