Connect with us

News

‘We Happy Few’ Chock-Full of Hive Minds, Drugs and Paranoia

Published

on

Happy

It’s the groovy 60s, baby. A pop-bubblegum run of swinging British culture. Only, in this alternate dimension, the Germans won World War II and left the remains of its stead a plastic, complacent and terrifying place. This is the world of Compulsion Game’s We Happy Few.

The overlying result on society is a nightmare where everyone is perpetually in a hive state, drugged and under a fascist fear induced regime. Ahem, sounds kinda familiar, right?

The German’s victory during WWII lead to Britain being gutted and its residents sent to random locations via train. This left society in the doldrums, until the invention of a pill called Joy. The drug became required by law and allowed Britain to see nothing but the good, around them despite there being none.

In We Happy Few, you take on the role of three Wellington Wells residents, each with their own strengths and weaknesses. While some have more physical strength others are better at sneaking around or great at the science of chemistry. This makes for each character, being a different experience from the previous by forcing the player to craft and use wits as opposed to fighting, or having an all out brawl in some instances.

The word “dystopia” gets thrown around a lot but We Happy Few, seriously earns the description with its closely molded 1984 and The Prisoner similarities. Both the world and the quirky characters separate the game from anything in recent gaming history and holy smokes am I all about something new.

You first take on the timid mod ways of Arthur, a censorship employee who forgets to take his Joy meds and finds that the world is very dark when not looking through Joy stimulated rose-tinted glass. Arthur is instantly cast out of Wellington Wells and into the sewers and outskirts of the city where the ‘downers’ live. These folks, much like Arthur have stopped taking their meds and live in a real and depressed state, shamed and exiled.

Happy

After the withdrawal from Joy causes Arthur’s memories to flood back to him, his primary goal is to find his brother Percival, who he was separated from at a young age following the German’s WWII win. To do this you will have to use your noggin and skills to infiltrate Wellington Wells under the guise of a regular ole Welly.

A lot of the games suspense and unease comes from its ability to make you feel like an outsider throughout its runtime. Forcing you to sneak around and act try to fit in, is an experience that Compulsion Games didn’t shy from. These bits of the game are not nice, and skews the realms of ego and social norms. It’s well thought out and rooted in a feeling I think all of us have felt at some point, but here on a larger more threatening scale.

By taking the role of different characters the games narrative is thoroughly explored. Both voice acting and the games writing allows for a great amount of what you want to discover in this world. Good thing too, because there is plenty of the world to investigate and even more nooks and crannies to loot. Arthur’s story alone takes upwards of 30 hours.

Tired side missions do become tedious after a while but the central plot is enough to keep you engaged. Only a few open world sandboxes have cracked the code of making side missions seem less like chores and more like fun, unfortunately We Happy Few lands in the camp that didn’t quite crack that riddle.

Looting is a large part of the game that dips a toe into both survival and RPG pools. Crafting outfits to fit in, lock picks to open doors and other tools of the trade do require you to look around and loot frequently. Along the way, you are free to upgrade skill trees to help balance your character out. Survival elements are at play but aren’t so extreme that they can kill you. For example, being hungry or thirsty won’t cause death, so much as it will be a nuisance to properly accomplish other feats in the physical exertion department.

Happy

We Happy Few was in preview phase for a while before its final release. During that time, the game went through many changes to its survival approach, as well as ironing out some buggier issues. With a narrative pushed into the final mix, it’s impossible to not see the seams now. It’s a small complaint, because it probably only extends to people who had been playing it in beta, but still, I see the games cracks and at times I can see blatantly forced pieces of narrative being pushed into puzzle gaps it didn’t belong in. That being said, it doesn’t take away from the experience as a whole.

There are some terrifying socio parallels at work throughout this game, from its petrified masses that surrendered to paper tanks, to a society in denial that lies to itself in order to continue surviving. All those bits of disturbing content you see on the news currently, and Twitter working overtime is all illustrated in the characters, towns and story of We Happy Few in ultra-satirical ways.

I extremely enjoy this off the beaten path approach to a game, and the earnestness that comes with it. The cartoonish greens, blues and yellows scream, but not with excitability. Instead, this gem uses those colors to alarm us, similar to a poisonous snake in the wild. We Happy Few strives to be its own bizarre natured self, and it achieves it and earns it. Its Orwellian sensibilities combined with its Monty Python instances and The Prisoner peculiar dread puts We Happy Few in a class all its own and an experience that shouldn’t be missed.

We Happy Few is out now on PC, PS4 and Xbox One.

 

 

 

Listen to the 'Eye On Horror Podcast'

Listen to the 'Eye On Horror Podcast'

Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

News

‘Wednesday’ Season Two Drops New Teaser Video That Reveals Full Cast

Published

on

Christopher Lloyd Wednesday Season 2

Netflix announced this morning that Wednesday season 2 is finally entering production. Fans have been waiting a long time for more of the creepy icon. Season one of Wednesday premiered in November of 2022.

In our new world of streaming entertainment, it isn’t uncommon for shows to take years to release a new season. If they release another one at all. Even though we will likely have to wait quite a while to see the show, any news is good news.

Wednesday Cast

The new season of Wednesday looks to have an amazing cast. Jenna Ortega (Scream) will be reprising her iconic role as Wednesday. She will be joined by Billie Piper (Scoop), Steve Buscemi (Boardwalk Empire), Evie Templeton (Return to Silent Hill), Owen Painter (The Handmaid’s Tale), and Noah Taylor (Charlie and the Chocolate Factory).

We will also get to see some of the amazing cast from season one making a return. Wednesday season 2 will feature Catherine-Zeta Jones (Side Effects), Luis Guzman (Genie), Issac Ordonez (A Wrinkle in Time), and Luyanda Unati Lewis-Nyawo (Devs).

If all of that star power wasn’t enough, the legendary Tim Burton (The Nightmare Before Christmas) will be directing the series. As a cheeky nod from Netflix, this season of Wednesday will be titled Here We Woe Again.

Jenna Ortega Wednesday
Jenna Ortega as Wednesday Addams

We don’t know much about much about what Wednesday season two will entail. However, Ortega has stated that this season will be more horror focused. “We’re definitely leaning into a little bit more horror. It’s really, really exciting because, all throughout the show, while Wednesday does need a little bit of an arc, she never really changes and that’s the wonderful thing about her.”

That’s all the information that we have. Make sure to check back here for more news and updates.

Listen to the 'Eye On Horror Podcast'

Listen to the 'Eye On Horror Podcast'

Continue Reading

Movies

A24 Reportedly “Pulls Plug” On Peacock’s ‘Crystal Lake’ Series

Published

on

Crystal

Film studio A24 might not be going forward with its planned Peacock Friday the 13th spinoff called Crystal Lake according to Fridaythe13thfranchise.com. The website quotes entertainment blogger Jeff Sneider who made a statement on his webpage through a subscription paywall. 

“I’m hearing that A24 has pulled the plug on Crystal Lake, its planned Peacock series based on the Friday the 13th franchise featuring masked killer Jason Voorhees. Bryan Fuller was due to executive produce the horror series.

It’s unclear whether this is a permanent decision or a temporary one, as A24 had no comment. Perhaps Peacock will help the trades shed more light on this project, which was announced back in 2022.”

Back in January 2023, we reported that some big names were behind this streaming project including Bryan Fuller, Kevin Williamson, and Friday the 13th Part 2 final girl Adrienne King.

Fan Made Crystal Lake Poster

“‘Crystal Lake info from Bryan Fuller! They officially start writing in 2 weeks (writers are here in the audience).” tweeted social media writer Eric Goldman who tweeted the info while attending a Friday the 13th 3D screening event in January 2023. “It will have two scores to choose from – a modern one and a classic Harry Manfredini one. Kevin Williamson is writing an episode. Adrienne King will have a recurring role. Yay! Fuller has pitched four seasons for Crystal Lake. Only one officially ordered so far though he notes Peacock would have to pay a pretty hefty penalty if they didn’t order a Season 2. Asked if he can confirm Pamela’s role in the Crystal Lake series, Fuller replied ‘We’re honestly going to be covering it all. The series is covering the life and times of these two characters’ (presumably he’s referring to Pamela and Jason there!)'”

Whether or not Peacock is moving forward with the project is unclear and since this news is secondhand information, it still has to be verified which will require Peacock and/or A24 to make an official statement which they have yet to do.

But keep checking back to iHorror for the latest updates to this developing story.

Listen to the 'Eye On Horror Podcast'

Listen to the 'Eye On Horror Podcast'

Continue Reading

News

New Images for MaXXXine Show A Bloody Kevin Bacon and Mia Goth in all Her Glory

Published

on

Kevin Bacon in MaXXXine

Ti West (X) has been knocking it out of the park with his sexy horror trilogy as of late. While we still have some time to kill before MaXXXine releases, Entertainment Weekly has dropped some images to wet our appetite while we wait.

It feels like just yesterday X was shocking audiences with its granny horror porno shoot. Now, we are just months ways from Maxxxine shocking the world once again. Fans can check out Maxine’s new 80s inspired adventure in theatres on July 5th, 2024.

MaXXXine

West is known for taking horror in new directions. And it looks as though he plans to do the same with MaXXXine. In his interview with Entertainment Weekly, he had the following to say.

“If you’re expecting it to be part of this X movie and people will be killed, yeah, I’m going to deliver on all those things. But it’s going to zig instead of zag in a lot of places that people aren’t expecting. It’s a very decadent world that she lives in, and it’s a very aggressive world that she lives in, but the threat shows up in an unexpected way.”

MaXXXine

We can also expect MaXXXine to be the biggest movie in the franchise. West isn’t holding anything back for the third installment. “The thing that the other two movies don’t have is that sort of scope. To try to do a big, sprawling Los Angeles ensemble movie is what the movie was, and that’s just a big undertaking. There’s a kind of noir-ish mystery vibe to the movie that’s very fun.”

However, it looks as though MaXXXine will be the end of this saga. Although West has some other ideas for our beloved killer, he believes this will be the end of her story.

That’s all the information we have at this time. Make sure to check back here for more news and updates.

Listen to the 'Eye On Horror Podcast'

Listen to the 'Eye On Horror Podcast'

Continue Reading