Compare Alan Wake 2 prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Epic Games. Published by Epic Games Publishing. Released on 10/27/2023. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Action, Horror, Adventure, Story rich.

Remedy made a 15-20 hour horror game that prioritises atmosphere and meta-narrative over action, and either that trade-off will be the best thing you play all year or a slow-burn slog you abandon by hour four.

I went into Alan Wake 2 expecting a polish pass on the original's flashlight-and-gun loop. What I got was something stranger, more cinematic, and more divisive than almost anything else in the AAA survival-horror space. Remedy split the experience across two protagonists and two realities: FBI agent Saga Anderson investigates ritualistic murders in the Pacific Northwest town of Bright Falls, while writer Alan Wake remains trapped in the Dark Place, an ever-shifting psychological nightmare he is desperately trying to write his way out of. You can switch between their storylines at will for most of the game, and the further you get, the more that structural decision pays off. On the mechanics side, do not come here for a twitchy shooter. Combat is sparse and deliberate, styled loosely after modern Resident Evil's weight and ammo scarcity, with the flashlight still serving as the tool that burns away enemy shields before you can land a killing shot. Saga's Mind Place lets her pin clues to a case board, profile suspects, and track the investigation visually, which is a cleaner and more satisfying version of the detective-board idea than most games attempt. Alan's equivalent is the Writer's Room, where he slots narrative concepts onto a Plot Board to physically reshape Dark Place environments, unlocking new paths and items. When that mechanic clicks, it is genuinely cool. Both characters also get their own separate upgrade trees using resources found in their respective worlds, and there is enough optional content, from Cult Stashes and Nursery Rhyme puzzles on Saga's side to Words of Power and Echoes on Alan's, to reward thorough exploration without forcing it. Where the game is genuinely unmatched is in its production craft. The lighting on PC is exceptional, the live-action FMV sequences are integrated into gameplay in ways that feel like a real formal experiment rather than a gimmick, and the audio design is the kind of detail that makes you keep headphones on even when nothing is happening. The game swept the Best Art Direction, Best Narrative, and Best Game Direction awards at The Game Awards 2023, and those wins feel earned rather than ceremonial. Critics across most major outlets scored the PC version in the low-to-mid 90s and OpenCritic reports 93% recommendation rate, placing it among the best-reviewed games of its release year. The caveats are real though. Pacing is the biggest problem. The opening hours are slow, and Saga's investigation sequences can tip from methodical into tedious when the evidence-pinning starts to feel like admin work. The combat never quite achieves flow - the dodge, torch, shoot rhythm that the original eventually made instinctive is looser here, and a handful of boss encounters lean on frustration rather than challenge. Sparse manual save points mean a bad encounter or a rare scripting glitch can cost you 10-15 minutes of progress. There is also a vocal minority who find the meta-narrative self-indulgent, which is a fair read if you are not on board with Remedy's particular brand of TV-show-in-a-game maximalism. On PC specifically, the title is an Epic Games Store exclusive with no Steam release currently planned, which is worth factoring into your launcher preferences. The honest pitch: if you liked Control, Twin Peaks, or anything that bends genre logic in service of atmosphere, this is close to the best version of that experience you can find in a big-budget game. If you want snappy survival-horror combat or a plot that does not ask you to read the margins, you will struggle with it. Alex, Scout Team

Alan Wake 2

Alan Wake 2

Oct 27, 2023Epic GamesEpic Games Publishing
GamerScout Says

Remedy made a 15-20 hour horror game that prioritises atmosphere and meta-narrative over action, and either that trade-off will be the best thing you play all year or a slow-burn slog you abandon by hour four.

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GamerScout Verdict

Worth it for players who want atmosphere and meta-narrative over action; a tough sell if twitchy survival-horror is the expectation.

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About Alan Wake 2

I went into Alan Wake 2 expecting a polish pass on the original's flashlight-and-gun loop. What I got was something stranger, more cinematic, and more divisive than almost anything else in the AAA survival-horror space. Remedy split the experience across two protagonists and two realities: FBI agent Saga Anderson investigates ritualistic murders in the Pacific Northwest town of Bright Falls, while writer Alan Wake remains trapped in the Dark Place, an ever-shifting psychological nightmare he is desperately trying to write his way out of. You can switch between their storylines at will for most of the game, and the further you get, the more that structural decision pays off. On the mechanics side, do not come here for a twitchy shooter. Combat is sparse and deliberate, styled loosely after modern Resident Evil's weight and ammo scarcity, with the flashlight still serving as the tool that burns away enemy shields before you can land a killing shot. Saga's Mind Place lets her pin clues to a case board, profile suspects, and track the investigation visually, which is a cleaner and more satisfying version of the detective-board idea than most games attempt. Alan's equivalent is the Writer's Room, where he slots narrative concepts onto a Plot Board to physically reshape Dark Place environments, unlocking new paths and items. When that mechanic clicks, it is genuinely cool. Both characters also get their own separate upgrade trees using resources found in their respective worlds, and there is enough optional content, from Cult Stashes and Nursery Rhyme puzzles on Saga's side to Words of Power and Echoes on Alan's, to reward thorough exploration without forcing it. Where the game is genuinely unmatched is in its production craft. The lighting on PC is exceptional, the live-action FMV sequences are integrated into gameplay in ways that feel like a real formal experiment rather than a gimmick, and the audio design is the kind of detail that makes you keep headphones on even when nothing is happening. The game swept the Best Art Direction, Best Narrative, and Best Game Direction awards at The Game Awards 2023, and those wins feel earned rather than ceremonial. Critics across most major outlets scored the PC version in the low-to-mid 90s and OpenCritic reports 93% recommendation rate, placing it among the best-reviewed games of its release year. The caveats are real though. Pacing is the biggest problem. The opening hours are slow, and Saga's investigation sequences can tip from methodical into tedious when the evidence-pinning starts to feel like admin work. The combat never quite achieves flow - the dodge, torch, shoot rhythm that the original eventually made instinctive is looser here, and a handful of boss encounters lean on frustration rather than challenge. Sparse manual save points mean a bad encounter or a rare scripting glitch can cost you 10-15 minutes of progress. There is also a vocal minority who find the meta-narrative self-indulgent, which is a fair read if you are not on board with Remedy's particular brand of TV-show-in-a-game maximalism. On PC specifically, the title is an Epic Games Store exclusive with no Steam release currently planned, which is worth factoring into your launcher preferences. The honest pitch: if you liked Control, Twin Peaks, or anything that bends genre logic in service of atmosphere, this is close to the best version of that experience you can find in a big-budget game. If you want snappy survival-horror combat or a plot that does not ask you to read the margins, you will struggle with it.

Alex
Alex · Scout Team

Catch-all

Tags

tier:no-steam-match:aaa-pricedenriched-from-kinguinDual ProtagonistMind Place MechanicWriter's Room PuzzleFMV IntegrationSparse CombatDark Place ExplorationUpgrade TreesArthouse HorrorEpic Exclusive

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Game Info

Developer
Epic Games
Publisher
Epic Games Publishing
Release Date
Oct 27, 2023

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Alan Wake 2 is available on PC, Xbox.

When was Alan Wake 2 released?

Alan Wake 2 was released on 27 October 2023.

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Alan Wake 2 was developed by Epic Games and published by Epic Games Publishing.