Compare Alan Wake prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Remedy Entertainment. Published by Remedy Entertainment. Released on 2/16/2012. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Action, Adventure. Metacritic score: 83/100.

Remedy's cult psychological thriller still hits hard: a flashlight-and-gun loop wrapped around one of the most atmospheric stories in third-person action.

I picked up Alan Wake expecting a serviceable action game with a moody coat of paint. What I got was something far stranger and more committed to its own vision than I bargained for. Remedy built the entire experience around a single, elegant combat loop: strip the darkness from possessed Taken with your flashlight, then finish them with a revolver, shotgun, or flare. On paper that sounds like a gimmick. In practice, the tension it generates punches well above its mechanical weight, because ammo and batteries are both finite, and the game consistently throws numbers at you that make both feel precious. The setting does the heavy lifting. Bright Falls, a fog-drenched Pacific Northwest logging town with Twin Peaks energy, is one of the most convincingly realized small-town horror environments in gaming. Most combat takes place in pine forests at night, and Remedy clearly understood what a forest actually feels like to move through: disorienting, beautiful, full of shapes that might be enemies or might just be shadows. Scattered throughout the world are manuscript pages that function as found fiction, radio broadcasts, and TV shows that deepen the lore without ever holding your hand. The storytelling is structured episodically, like a TV season, and that pacing works well for a single run. Where the game earns its cult-classic label is the protagonist himself. Alan Wake is not a likable guy. He is impatient, self-absorbed, and occasionally outright awful to the people around him. Remedy leans into this intentionally, building a genuinely unreliable narrator whose psychological state bleeds into every scene. Whether you can trust what you are seeing is a question the game refuses to fully answer, and that ambiguity is both its greatest strength and, for some players, its most frustrating quality. The in-game writing has drawn criticism for being uneven, which is a fair shot at a title that asks you to believe its lead is a celebrated novelist. The combat, for all its atmosphere, does run into repetition issues. Enemy variety is limited across the game's six episodes, and the shine-then-shoot rhythm, satisfying as it is early on, starts to feel mechanical by the back half. The dodge mechanic adds some depth and flares provide breathing room, but the game leans heavily on that same loop without enough variation to keep it fresh all the way to the credits. The cliffhanger ending divided players on release, though the PC version ships with both DLC episodes included, which soften the blow considerably. If you care about atmosphere, psychological storytelling, or just want to understand where Alan Wake 2 is coming from, the original is still worth your time. Go in for the story and the setting, tolerate the repetition, and accept that its protagonist is probably the most annoying man in Remedy's catalog. That tension between compelling fiction and occasionally sluggish action is exactly what makes it a cult game rather than a mainstream hit. Alex, Scout Team

Alan Wake

Alan Wake

Feb 16, 2012Remedy Entertainment
GamerScout Says

Remedy's cult psychological thriller still hits hard: a flashlight-and-gun loop wrapped around one of the most atmospheric stories in third-person action.

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About Alan Wake

I picked up Alan Wake expecting a serviceable action game with a moody coat of paint. What I got was something far stranger and more committed to its own vision than I bargained for. Remedy built the entire experience around a single, elegant combat loop: strip the darkness from possessed Taken with your flashlight, then finish them with a revolver, shotgun, or flare. On paper that sounds like a gimmick. In practice, the tension it generates punches well above its mechanical weight, because ammo and batteries are both finite, and the game consistently throws numbers at you that make both feel precious. The setting does the heavy lifting. Bright Falls, a fog-drenched Pacific Northwest logging town with Twin Peaks energy, is one of the most convincingly realized small-town horror environments in gaming. Most combat takes place in pine forests at night, and Remedy clearly understood what a forest actually feels like to move through: disorienting, beautiful, full of shapes that might be enemies or might just be shadows. Scattered throughout the world are manuscript pages that function as found fiction, radio broadcasts, and TV shows that deepen the lore without ever holding your hand. The storytelling is structured episodically, like a TV season, and that pacing works well for a single run. Where the game earns its cult-classic label is the protagonist himself. Alan Wake is not a likable guy. He is impatient, self-absorbed, and occasionally outright awful to the people around him. Remedy leans into this intentionally, building a genuinely unreliable narrator whose psychological state bleeds into every scene. Whether you can trust what you are seeing is a question the game refuses to fully answer, and that ambiguity is both its greatest strength and, for some players, its most frustrating quality. The in-game writing has drawn criticism for being uneven, which is a fair shot at a title that asks you to believe its lead is a celebrated novelist. The combat, for all its atmosphere, does run into repetition issues. Enemy variety is limited across the game's six episodes, and the shine-then-shoot rhythm, satisfying as it is early on, starts to feel mechanical by the back half. The dodge mechanic adds some depth and flares provide breathing room, but the game leans heavily on that same loop without enough variation to keep it fresh all the way to the credits. The cliffhanger ending divided players on release, though the PC version ships with both DLC episodes included, which soften the blow considerably. If you care about atmosphere, psychological storytelling, or just want to understand where Alan Wake 2 is coming from, the original is still worth your time. Go in for the story and the setting, tolerate the repetition, and accept that its protagonist is probably the most annoying man in Remedy's catalog. That tension between compelling fiction and occasionally sluggish action is exactly what makes it a cult game rather than a mainstream hit.

Alex
Alex · Scout Team

Catch-all

Tags

Single-playerSteam AchievementsFull controller supportSteam Trading CardsSteam CloudRemote Play on TVFamily SharingsteamPsychological HorrorEpisodic StructureUnreliable NarratorLight-Based CombatAtmospheric ExplorationCollectible LoreLinear NarrativeCult Classic

System Requirements

Minimum

Processor
Dual Core 2GHz Intel or 2.8GHz AMD
Memory
2 GB RAM
Graphics
DirectX 10 compatible with 512MB RAM DirectX®: 9.0c Hard Drive: 8 GB HD space Sound: DirectX 9.0c compatible

Recommended

Processor
Quad Core 2.66GHz Intel or 3.2GHz AMD
Memory
4 GB RAM
Graphics
DirectX 10 compatible or later with 1GB RAM DirectX®: 10 Hard Drive: 8 GB HD space Sound: Direct…

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
83
Steam
90%(57,357)

Game Info

Developer
Remedy Entertainment
Publisher
Remedy Entertainment
Release Date
Feb 16, 2012

Game Modes

singleplayer

Languages

Audio (6)
EnglishGermanFrenchItalianSpanish - SpainJapanese
Subtitles (11)
EnglishGermanFrenchItalianKoreanSpanish - Spain+5 more

Features

AchievementsController SupportCloud Saves

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Frequently asked questions about Alan Wake

How much does Alan Wake cost?

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What platforms is Alan Wake available on?

Alan Wake is available on PC, Xbox.

When was Alan Wake released?

Alan Wake was released on 16 February 2012.

Who developed Alan Wake?

Alan Wake was developed by Remedy Entertainment.

Is Alan Wake worth buying?

Alan Wake holds a Metacritic score of 83/100, making it one of the standout Action titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.