We start the episode in Principal Wells office, as Chloe is about to be expelled from school, and during my play-through, she is merely suspended for the remainder of the year. With this title being a prequel, I know what fate awaits both characters, especially that of Rachel Amber, but I still have hope that at least for the final episode, that the characters can share in at least a few more happy moments before the inevitable happens.Įpisode 2 continues with Chloe's world continuing to fall apart. I found that this time it distanced me a bit too much from what had occurred in the prior episode, with it taking me a short while to remember what exactly had happened and what choices I had made a few short months ago. It's a very different experience playing Life is Strange as an episodic series, as I binged the first game in just two days. While the debut episode was a solid effort to kick-start this three episode prequel, episode two is held back due to the game's janky controls and failure for the Backtalk system to really shine.įor my thoughts on Episode 1, including a discussion about how this game differs from the previous series, please check out my review for it here. The follow-up, Before the Storm, was a chance to look back and see how certain events would shape the eventual blue-haired rocker that is Chloe Price, to who she would be at the start of the original game. Max, Chloe, and the time-traveling shenanigans that each of them got up to, not to mention the emotional finale the game ended on, depending of course if you picked a certain ending, is one of my favorite games ever made. ![]() The first Life is Strange was such a well told and enjoyable game. "A delinquent, a broken girl from a broken home."
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