Fans Are Not Thrilled With Life Is Strange
Kotaku · 16h
Fans Are Not Thrilled With Life Is Strange: Double Exposure’s Handling Of Max And Chloe
In a vacuum, this development could make sense. People grow apart, especially friends and significant others from high school. But given what Max and Chloe went through together in the first Life Is Strange, it does not sit well with fans that their relationship would be discarded off-screen.
The Verge · 11h
Life is Strange: Double Exposure is more heart than whodunit
Nonetheless, get ready for the inevitable heartache. While Double Exposure may no longer be centered on teenage woes, world-rending despair is a timeless emotion. The pains of being human transcend age, after all. Life is Strange: Double Exposure launches on October 29th on the Switch, Xbox, PS5, and PC.
Shacknews · 1d
Life is Strange: Double Exposure puts Max Caulfield back in focus
Life is Strange: Double Exposure finds Max Caulfield on a new campus: Caledon University, where she serves as a photographer-in-residence. After the murder of her friend, Safi, Max sets out to not only solve the murder, but prevent it from ever happening.
Game Rant · 2d
Life is Strange: Double Exposure Hands-On Preview - A Focused Development
Compared to the first game, the writing has most certainly improved. There were no immersion-breaking lines of dialogue that we encountered, and characters were still witty and charming in unique ways, especially Max and her lovably dorky inner dialogue being in full force.
Tom's Guide · 2d
I’ve played the first two chapters of Life is Strange: Double Exposure — and now I’m concerned
I’m a recent (but enthusiastic) Life is Strange convert. My journey with the series began first with Life is Strange: True Colors and its DLC, and from there, I went back to the very beginning and played the game that started it all, and totally got why Max’s story hooked quite so many players all those years ago.
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results