After taking over development duties from Don’t Nod, Deck Nine really made the Life Is Strange series its own with 2021’s True Colours. Now heading up Double Exposure, the developer is reaching into Don’t Nod territory by bringing back everybody’s favourite hella awkward teen, Max Caulfield, now as an adult. With a twisting and turning narrative and plenty of supernatural hijinx, how has this latest outing from Deck Nine fared? Sadly, it’s not quite the homecoming celebration we were hoping for.
Double Exposure plants its feet firmly in Caledon University Campus, a prestigious fine arts school where Max Caulfield resides as a lecturer in photography. As fans of the original, it’s a lot of fun getting to see a grown up Max, still very passionate about photography and playfully commenting on everything she sees. The real juice lies in Max’s troubled past though, with despondent messages and a guarded secrecy showing the events of Arcadia Bay still very much haunt her.
Now though with a new small group of friends and an idyllic wintry setting, Double Exposure arrives with the level of cosiness you’d expect from the series. The old Victorian university campus is coated in snow, everyone is wrapped up in warm looking jackets with friendly smiles, and the inviting colour palette had us excited to cosy up to our PS5s. But of course, it’s not all sunshine and rainbows when a body is found on campus.
After the mysterious murder of one of her friends, Max must use her time abilities - something she’d vowed never to do again - to solve the mystery. Unlike the first series, Double Exposure ditches Max’s rewind powers in exchange for two timelines. Max can switch between a timeline where her friend is dead, and one where she is not. It’s an interesting multiversal murder mystery that sees you connecting the dots between different versions of the same cast of characters.
Double Exposure starts out strong, with an intriguing and sharp first couple of episodes – there are five in total. Establishing relationships with your co-workers and students, you’ll utilise your timeline hopping abilities to bypass obstacles, wring information out of one version of a character to pry more out of the other, and piece together its central mystery.
It’s a fantastic balance in those earlier parts of the story, as you have to keep track of the type of relationship you have with each character in each timeline. You can be best friends in one timeline and sworn enemies in another - and the game will let you slip up with which version told you what if you’re not careful.
It's made all the better thanks to the returning Max Caulfield. Never a character we felt the need to see again, a grown-up Max in Double Exposure is like running into a high school best friend. She's just as likeable as ever, and it's weird in a way to see her drinking at bars or talking about her sex life. But in all the right ways this still feels like the angsty teen we fell in love with in the first game, with just a dash of trauma from her past experience. And for those wondering, Double Exposure is respectfully cautious to call back too much to the first game. There's references and moments fans of the original will enjoy, but for all intents and purposes this is a standalone adventure.
Sadly, the further into Double Exposure you delve the more surface level everything begins to appear. For one the setting of Caledon University campus is severely lacking in comparison to past towns like Arcadia Bay and Haven Springs. The entire game takes place in just a handful of settings, yet none really capture the essence of a university campus. We never see the student accommodation, a packed cafeteria, hell, we never even see a class taking place. There are NPCs dotted around that you can listen to, but it feels quite insular compared to past seasons.
And that in a way continues over to the characters. While there are some characters we find interesting like Gwen, or lovable like Moses, the playing field is flat since students and co-workers are all treated the same by Max. It’s very easy to forget that Max is even a teacher at Caledon, as she texts students and barely seems to have adult relationships with any of the other teachers. While it’s not entirely detrimental to the characters themselves, it takes away from the setting's believability, something quickly perfected in previous seasons.
In addition, the central mystery, while it has its goosebump inducing moments, it eventually starts to feel a little too reliant on the supernatural. Life Is Strange has somehow always managed to maintain a perfect balance between its dark story and subject matter, and the more far flung powers of its protagonists. Never once during True Colours did we question the reality of a protagonist that could see and feel other people’s emotions. Yet here, Max’s abilities start to feel like something out of a young adult novel.
Sure, if there was a series to fit the young adult novel descriptor, it would be Life Is Strange, but it’s never quite felt like that before. Whereas previous seasons have had dark secrets uncovered with the aid of supernatural powers, in Double Exposure the powers are too entwined with the mystery for our liking. It takes away from that darker and somewhat grounded tone of previous seasons, and for us meant big revelations fell a little flat.
Double Exposure also lacks the emotional resonance of previous outings. While there were moments where we had a lump in our throat or thought “aww, that’s nice”, there rarely were the tear-inducing moments like Max’s final decision at the end of the first season. We’re sure some of you will find that resonance but for us, it just didn’t hit this time around.
Something Double Exposure gets so incredibly right though are the visuals. True Colours was a big step up for the series, and this outing takes it even further. The same warm colour palette is on display, and there are those flairs of artistic graphical style, but there’s a layer of realism and believability to its designs. Incredible lighting and far improved facial animations make this a properly cinematic experience at times. We were inspired to take screenshots all the time, because it’s just such a nice looking game.
There are moments when the game hands control over to you, and while everything is fairly limited gameplay wise, it all looks and runs nice enough. There’s a quality and performance mode for those that want the choice, but in this case we opted for quality with no real visual issues.
Annoyingly, Double Exposure falls short of technical perfection as the pre-release build that we experienced is plagued with audio issues. Dialogue frequently cuts in, one moment it's drowned out by background music, the next it’s incredibly loud, and sometimes dialogue would just be completely missing from a scene. A pre-launch patch is apparently on the way, but from what we experienced this was the biggest technical drawback of Double Exposure.
Conclusion
If it seems like we’re dogging on this latest outing for the series, it’s only because we know just how unique and entertaining it can be. Double Exposure isn’t a bad game, it’s just not the series at its best. It loses some of that inviting atmosphere with Caledon paling in comparison to Haven Springs or Arcadia Bay, and its narrative suffers from an overreliance on the supernatural. But we’d be lying if we said it wasn’t great to see Max Caulfield return and we still think it's worth checking out if you’re a fan of the series.
Comments 36
Thanks for the review, Aaron. I'm a big Life Is Strange fan so a bit disappointed with the score. Will still check it out, though.
Aw, man, that review score is a bummer, but I’m still diving into this one, believing I’ll enjoy it more than the review score. I can’t take any more disappointment this year in gaming!
If this one flops for me, man, do I hope Lost Records delivers.
its averaging a 75 on metacritic so push squares score is one of the lowest
Really disappointed to read about this, but for me I’m such a big fan of the games just seeing and hearing another chapter in Max’s life is worth the asking price. But at least I’m prepared for a B-movie affair this time.
Was hoping this would be good. Was going to ask for it for Christmas off my wife but I'll look into it a bit more now
Once again this site just leaves me confused. I know people like different things but iv just read two absolutely gushing reviews of this-ign and destructoid,and this one seems like it's for a different game. And my initial thought is well maybe he just doesn't like these types of games but that doesn't seem to be the case. I don't know I guess that's just life different things hit for different people.
My best friend is a lesbian and it seems like this has absolutely bombed among that community, which is probably its biggest audience. Having to cater to both endings of the first game has scuppered it. She’s distraught 😂
@nessisonett I wish you hadn't said that, that is a spoiler for me.
This is one of my favorite series. I've seen a lot of poor reception for the first game and Before the Storm, so I still have hope I will really like this one. I am sad that this and the new Dragon Age may be disappointing, I really thought this was going to be a really standout week for release but it seems that may not be the case.
Not surprised really… the last game didn’t receive the best reviews either. Still I’ll be playing it, but I don’t have my expectations high.
@nessisonett
A game for everyone is a game for nobody...
@zhoont That’s not a spoiler at all, it’s no different from Mass Effect 2 carrying forward from Mass Effect 1. It’s literally the premise of the entire game.
I know reviews are ones personal opinion but it baffles ones mind that you give it a 6/10 and ign gives it a 9/10.
@nessisonett I'd be happy with more games just picking a canon version and going from there - or even better deliberately going for a third option that fits none of the original pathways exactly. I think some old games and films used to do that.
True Colors was really bad IMO so I’m not surprised this one didn’t hit as well. It’s a shame because I really enjoyed the first game
Disappointing, Deck Nine seems to be losing their touch, a real shame considering True Colours was excellent The higher price and early access shenanigans put me off preordering or buying this at launch anyway, so I'll definitely be waiting a while now.
@MrHabushi now I wasn't keen on true colors as a fan of the others. It's worth noting that reviews for this are all over the place ranging from 10s right down to 4s so I wouldn't put all your faith in this one review.
After the first game, they focused on prioritize more the LGBT/diversity stuff and "making a game for everyone" instead of focusing on making a good story/gameplay/characters, and they wonder why none of the sequels reached the sales of the first one.
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I had it pre-ordered and my copy is already shipped, so I'm either going to just stick with it and hope it hits better with me or just send it back and wait.
According to another review or two, it seems like they botched the Max and Chloe dynamic in however they worked it into the story, which is quite a shame.
@zhoont Not really a spoiler as it appears the game just glosses over what ever ending the first game ended on. Basically both are canon and both endings will end Max in the same spot what is this game, think how in Zelda every timeline ends up at Breath of the Wild.
@DennisReynolds with the risk of sounding rude, how can revealing how the ending of the previous game is treated in the sequel NOT be a spoiler? Before I read his comment I didn't know if Chloe was going to show up or not, now I know she can't show up at all.
@nessisonett because one of the endings of that game has a character die, so now I know they can't show up in this sequel. It's pretty straightforward to see where I'm coming from if you've played the first game and seen both endings .
@zhoont And why can’t she show up? Play the game and find out how she’s treated. It’s not as simple as you’ve laid out.
Well that's disappointing I loved the first and before the storm but just liked the others. A 72 metacritic doesn't scream must buy now so will wait for at least one price drop.
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@zhoont I mean a character not showing up in a sequel is not really a spoiler especially when its been known for a while how the game treats the previous game.
I guess Matt Reeves dropped a big spoiler for The Penguin when he confirmed Batman won't appear. I guess Ryan Reynolds dropped a spoiler by revealing Cable won't be in D&W.
@BeerMonster Freedom of speech doesn't mean you can say whatever and expect no consequences. This is PQ house you expected to follow their rules. Sure though go to work tomorrow and call the boss the C bomb and see how far "freedom of speech" takes you with there response.
It's a shame LIS has lost its way,. Literally loved the first 2 and it's not been same since.
I'm looking forward to playing this one. I'm a big Life Is Strange fan and I generally think the Deck Nine games have been very good. I'm also wondering how they address the choice at the end of the first game since most people seem to fall into two camps on the ending of the first game and I think I'm actually in a third secret camp that nobody talks about. Anyway, I'll probably pick it up in a week or two and hopefully they've fixed some of those tech issues!
Is this because it didn't have a deluxe edition with a free pair of scissors?
This game looks AMAZING! Can't wait to play this one ASAP!
Having played this all evening, unless it really ranks in later chapters, it has every bit the magic of the original game. A bloody text message string made me emotional.
Maybe it does tank and deserves that 6, otherwise just a reminder reviews are personal opinions - and sometimes you’re going to disagree. Though it does seem harsh.
Its nice to revisit Life is Strange once again! Last time I played this franchise was "Before The Storm" (I wasn't really interested in LIS2 and True Colors).
As a massive LiS fan, I wanted to post a post-game comment on here. I think this review is harsh, but the reviewing community is typically harsh on the series, and it plays like… Life is Strange. Very much so. If you’ve played every one of them, enjoyed every one of them, guess what? You’ll like this one too. Yes, there’s some jank. Yes, there’s some political messaging. Yes, there’s awkward dialog that feels like it was written 10 years later than it should have been. Yes, there’s not much real gameplay. And, yes, you sort of have to let go of the first game in some ways to get the most out of this one. These are trademarks of the series. If there’s any game that wasn’t reviewed particularly well by the critical community, it’s this one, just as LiS2 was poorly assessed years ago. It’s not an issue with the critical community, but the fact that the series doesn’t follow conventional gaming logic. This is a game that requires a certain type of taste, but it’s not typical gamer taste. For my wife, a mostly non-gamer (she plays about 3 games a year and it takes her a long time to do it), she didn’t want to stop playing the game. When we wrapped it yesterday, we agreed it wasn’t our favorite in the series, but that we liked it as much as most other entries. We thought it was about as good as the original, but True Colors is probably still the one we think is the best one.
@ashipaw The sales may have declined, but the franchise is still generating considerable revenue (Aside from LIS 2 which was a way less then its predecessors) and a healthy appeal (Especially on Twitch).
True Colors for example had the fastest franchise selling copy to reach 100,000 sales ($5m revenue) in its debut month.
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