![]() The real solution to the puzzle is something you’ll never guess with what you’re given. Several clues found in the Timberline amount to nothing more than red herrings meant to steer you towards false conclusions. ![]() Its practices in mystery aren’t so unadulterated, however. The horror is a pleasant and mite modesty relative to the genre at-large. As a whole, The Suicide of Rachel Foster isn’t too formidable. The developers made it a point to provoke fear without the jumpscare shoddiness that plagues the horror walking sim. I sometimes even faltered for fear that a ghost or ghoul may be lurking down the Timberline’s dark corridors.īut neither ghost nor ghoul ever revealed itself. While a tad cliché, these invisible forces, for the most part, were capable of maintaining a steady tension. Floorboards creak, disembodied voices whisper, and unseen doors slam. The Suicide of Rachel Foster has the typical trappings of paranormal horror. But when a snowstorm confines her to the Timberline hotel, she’s forced to confront the past that permeates the hotel’s halls. As such, her homecoming is expected to be a short stay. Nicole is estranged from her father due to his romantic involvement with teenage Rachel Foster, which ultimately led to Rachel’s death. Players take the role of Nicole Wilson, who, after her father’s death, has returned to her family’s shuttered Montanan hotel. ![]() MonsterVine was supplied with a Steam code for review By its conclusion, however, The Suicide of Rachel Foster will leave a bad taste in your mouth. While the Timberline lacks the impossibility and character of the Overlook, some degree of respect is owed knowing where to tastefully walk the line between imitation and inspiration. But The Suicide of Rachel Foster never crosses the line into mere derivation. Anybody who has seen Stanley Kubrick’s 1980 hit classic, The Shining, will certainly see similarities between both properties’ settings and pieces. The Suicide of Rachel Foster doesn’t try to hide its muse. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |