Season 2 of Telltale's Walking Dead series might still be a ways away, but 400 Days is here to fill the hole in your heart that the first season left. Unfortunately, a strained attempt at a Twilight Zone-style mysteriousness in its final act proves the undoing of 400 Days, although it's miles above the network's usual Sharknado-type fare. A heated argument ensues between Dvorak, who insists that they abandon their post, and the others, who suspect that it may all be a part of the simulation. You can go through them in any order, meeting a man on a prison bus, a woman protecting her sister, a kid walking alongside a road, a duo of stoners, and a recovering junkie.
The different styles work well together, and help keep the chapters from feeling repetitive, "The different styles work well together...". Frank Scheck The characters here are given real depth, so you come to care about the entire cast even though you're spending no more than 20 minutes with the leading actors in each story. There isn't much action at all: Most of the time you just pick dialogue choices or make life-and-death calls that move the plot in one direction or another.
Director-screenwriter: Matt Osterman The Walking Dead: 400 Days review - Telltale prepares us for a new season of its zombie masterpiece with a taste of the horrors to come. There are some clever touches along the way, including an opening montage of space-related archival footage and a sly nod to Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey via a rendition of the song "Daisy Bell (Bicycle Built for Two)." 400 Days › Customer reviews; Customer reviews. Here, the dilemmas are darker, and some of the bleakest and most pragmatic choices make sense in this grim reality. While you won't end up feeling as attached to any of them as you did Lee or Clementine, you'll still feel for them more than you do most game characters--even if occasional graphical and technical glitches can shatter your immersion from time to time. FACEBOOK Distributor: Syfy Films While the game might seem like a cursory attempt to keep fans tided over until season two debuts later in 2013, it is actually one of the most imaginative, gripping, brutal, and best-written stories that you will experience all year. All of these stories stand on their own as particularly horrific snapshots of what it is to have survived the end of the world.
Still, there is virtually none of the quick-trigger zombie shooting or stomping that characterized Telltale's earlier Walking Dead episodes.
Season 2 of Telltale's Walking Dead series might still be a ways away, but 400 Days is here to fill the hole in your heart that the first season left. Unfortunately, a strained attempt at a Twilight Zone-style mysteriousness in its final act proves the undoing of 400 Days, although it's miles above the network's usual Sharknado-type fare. A heated argument ensues between Dvorak, who insists that they abandon their post, and the others, who suspect that it may all be a part of the simulation. You can go through them in any order, meeting a man on a prison bus, a woman protecting her sister, a kid walking alongside a road, a duo of stoners, and a recovering junkie.
The different styles work well together, and help keep the chapters from feeling repetitive, "The different styles work well together...". Frank Scheck The characters here are given real depth, so you come to care about the entire cast even though you're spending no more than 20 minutes with the leading actors in each story. There isn't much action at all: Most of the time you just pick dialogue choices or make life-and-death calls that move the plot in one direction or another.
Director-screenwriter: Matt Osterman The Walking Dead: 400 Days review - Telltale prepares us for a new season of its zombie masterpiece with a taste of the horrors to come. There are some clever touches along the way, including an opening montage of space-related archival footage and a sly nod to Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey via a rendition of the song "Daisy Bell (Bicycle Built for Two)." 400 Days › Customer reviews; Customer reviews. Here, the dilemmas are darker, and some of the bleakest and most pragmatic choices make sense in this grim reality. While you won't end up feeling as attached to any of them as you did Lee or Clementine, you'll still feel for them more than you do most game characters--even if occasional graphical and technical glitches can shatter your immersion from time to time. FACEBOOK Distributor: Syfy Films While the game might seem like a cursory attempt to keep fans tided over until season two debuts later in 2013, it is actually one of the most imaginative, gripping, brutal, and best-written stories that you will experience all year. All of these stories stand on their own as particularly horrific snapshots of what it is to have survived the end of the world.
Still, there is virtually none of the quick-trigger zombie shooting or stomping that characterized Telltale's earlier Walking Dead episodes.
Season 2 of Telltale's Walking Dead series might still be a ways away, but 400 Days is here to fill the hole in your heart that the first season left. Unfortunately, a strained attempt at a Twilight Zone-style mysteriousness in its final act proves the undoing of 400 Days, although it's miles above the network's usual Sharknado-type fare. A heated argument ensues between Dvorak, who insists that they abandon their post, and the others, who suspect that it may all be a part of the simulation. You can go through them in any order, meeting a man on a prison bus, a woman protecting her sister, a kid walking alongside a road, a duo of stoners, and a recovering junkie.
The different styles work well together, and help keep the chapters from feeling repetitive, "The different styles work well together...". Frank Scheck The characters here are given real depth, so you come to care about the entire cast even though you're spending no more than 20 minutes with the leading actors in each story. There isn't much action at all: Most of the time you just pick dialogue choices or make life-and-death calls that move the plot in one direction or another.
Director-screenwriter: Matt Osterman The Walking Dead: 400 Days review - Telltale prepares us for a new season of its zombie masterpiece with a taste of the horrors to come. There are some clever touches along the way, including an opening montage of space-related archival footage and a sly nod to Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey via a rendition of the song "Daisy Bell (Bicycle Built for Two)." 400 Days › Customer reviews; Customer reviews. Here, the dilemmas are darker, and some of the bleakest and most pragmatic choices make sense in this grim reality. While you won't end up feeling as attached to any of them as you did Lee or Clementine, you'll still feel for them more than you do most game characters--even if occasional graphical and technical glitches can shatter your immersion from time to time. FACEBOOK Distributor: Syfy Films While the game might seem like a cursory attempt to keep fans tided over until season two debuts later in 2013, it is actually one of the most imaginative, gripping, brutal, and best-written stories that you will experience all year. All of these stories stand on their own as particularly horrific snapshots of what it is to have survived the end of the world.
Still, there is virtually none of the quick-trigger zombie shooting or stomping that characterized Telltale's earlier Walking Dead episodes.
Season 2 of Telltale's Walking Dead series might still be a ways away, but 400 Days is here to fill the hole in your heart that the first season left. Unfortunately, a strained attempt at a Twilight Zone-style mysteriousness in its final act proves the undoing of 400 Days, although it's miles above the network's usual Sharknado-type fare. A heated argument ensues between Dvorak, who insists that they abandon their post, and the others, who suspect that it may all be a part of the simulation. You can go through them in any order, meeting a man on a prison bus, a woman protecting her sister, a kid walking alongside a road, a duo of stoners, and a recovering junkie.
The different styles work well together, and help keep the chapters from feeling repetitive, "The different styles work well together...". Frank Scheck The characters here are given real depth, so you come to care about the entire cast even though you're spending no more than 20 minutes with the leading actors in each story. There isn't much action at all: Most of the time you just pick dialogue choices or make life-and-death calls that move the plot in one direction or another.
Director-screenwriter: Matt Osterman The Walking Dead: 400 Days review - Telltale prepares us for a new season of its zombie masterpiece with a taste of the horrors to come. There are some clever touches along the way, including an opening montage of space-related archival footage and a sly nod to Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey via a rendition of the song "Daisy Bell (Bicycle Built for Two)." 400 Days › Customer reviews; Customer reviews. Here, the dilemmas are darker, and some of the bleakest and most pragmatic choices make sense in this grim reality. While you won't end up feeling as attached to any of them as you did Lee or Clementine, you'll still feel for them more than you do most game characters--even if occasional graphical and technical glitches can shatter your immersion from time to time. FACEBOOK Distributor: Syfy Films While the game might seem like a cursory attempt to keep fans tided over until season two debuts later in 2013, it is actually one of the most imaginative, gripping, brutal, and best-written stories that you will experience all year. All of these stories stand on their own as particularly horrific snapshots of what it is to have survived the end of the world.
Still, there is virtually none of the quick-trigger zombie shooting or stomping that characterized Telltale's earlier Walking Dead episodes.
Season 2 of Telltale's Walking Dead series might still be a ways away, but 400 Days is here to fill the hole in your heart that the first season left. Unfortunately, a strained attempt at a Twilight Zone-style mysteriousness in its final act proves the undoing of 400 Days, although it's miles above the network's usual Sharknado-type fare. A heated argument ensues between Dvorak, who insists that they abandon their post, and the others, who suspect that it may all be a part of the simulation. You can go through them in any order, meeting a man on a prison bus, a woman protecting her sister, a kid walking alongside a road, a duo of stoners, and a recovering junkie.
The different styles work well together, and help keep the chapters from feeling repetitive, "The different styles work well together...". Frank Scheck The characters here are given real depth, so you come to care about the entire cast even though you're spending no more than 20 minutes with the leading actors in each story. There isn't much action at all: Most of the time you just pick dialogue choices or make life-and-death calls that move the plot in one direction or another.
Director-screenwriter: Matt Osterman The Walking Dead: 400 Days review - Telltale prepares us for a new season of its zombie masterpiece with a taste of the horrors to come. There are some clever touches along the way, including an opening montage of space-related archival footage and a sly nod to Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey via a rendition of the song "Daisy Bell (Bicycle Built for Two)." 400 Days › Customer reviews; Customer reviews. Here, the dilemmas are darker, and some of the bleakest and most pragmatic choices make sense in this grim reality. While you won't end up feeling as attached to any of them as you did Lee or Clementine, you'll still feel for them more than you do most game characters--even if occasional graphical and technical glitches can shatter your immersion from time to time. FACEBOOK Distributor: Syfy Films While the game might seem like a cursory attempt to keep fans tided over until season two debuts later in 2013, it is actually one of the most imaginative, gripping, brutal, and best-written stories that you will experience all year. All of these stories stand on their own as particularly horrific snapshots of what it is to have survived the end of the world.
Still, there is virtually none of the quick-trigger zombie shooting or stomping that characterized Telltale's earlier Walking Dead episodes.
Receive news and offers from our other brands? Composers: Wojciech Goldzewski, Sean McMahaon. We can also find books to read, real and complete, such as "Thus spoke Zarathustra", in English yes. | Cookie Settings. The light downloadable episode only packs an hour-and-a-half punch and isn't really able to gain the emotional momentum that the first season did.
Season 2 of Telltale's Walking Dead series might still be a ways away, but 400 Days is here to fill the hole in your heart that the first season left. Unfortunately, a strained attempt at a Twilight Zone-style mysteriousness in its final act proves the undoing of 400 Days, although it's miles above the network's usual Sharknado-type fare. A heated argument ensues between Dvorak, who insists that they abandon their post, and the others, who suspect that it may all be a part of the simulation. You can go through them in any order, meeting a man on a prison bus, a woman protecting her sister, a kid walking alongside a road, a duo of stoners, and a recovering junkie.
The different styles work well together, and help keep the chapters from feeling repetitive, "The different styles work well together...". Frank Scheck The characters here are given real depth, so you come to care about the entire cast even though you're spending no more than 20 minutes with the leading actors in each story. There isn't much action at all: Most of the time you just pick dialogue choices or make life-and-death calls that move the plot in one direction or another.
Director-screenwriter: Matt Osterman The Walking Dead: 400 Days review - Telltale prepares us for a new season of its zombie masterpiece with a taste of the horrors to come. There are some clever touches along the way, including an opening montage of space-related archival footage and a sly nod to Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey via a rendition of the song "Daisy Bell (Bicycle Built for Two)." 400 Days › Customer reviews; Customer reviews. Here, the dilemmas are darker, and some of the bleakest and most pragmatic choices make sense in this grim reality. While you won't end up feeling as attached to any of them as you did Lee or Clementine, you'll still feel for them more than you do most game characters--even if occasional graphical and technical glitches can shatter your immersion from time to time. FACEBOOK Distributor: Syfy Films While the game might seem like a cursory attempt to keep fans tided over until season two debuts later in 2013, it is actually one of the most imaginative, gripping, brutal, and best-written stories that you will experience all year. All of these stories stand on their own as particularly horrific snapshots of what it is to have survived the end of the world.
Still, there is virtually none of the quick-trigger zombie shooting or stomping that characterized Telltale's earlier Walking Dead episodes.